News, events and articles about Sahaja Yoga meditation worldwide

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As part of the Realise Australia tour, Sahaja Yoga Meditation programs will be held in the following centres in North Queensland:

Ingham: 8 December 2006, 7.30 pm in the Community Room, Hinchinbrook Community Support Centre, 71 Townsville Rd, Ingham

Bowen: 9 December 2006, 2.00 pm at the Bowen Neighbourhood Centre, 20 William St, Bowen

Townsville: 10 December 2006, 11.00 am in the Meeting Room, Aitkenvale Library, Cnr Ross River Rd and Petunia St, Aitkenvale (Child Care side)

Experienced Sahaja Yoga practitioners will be present to provide an explanation of Sahaja Yoga Meditation. The program will include the opportunity to experience true meditation.

For further information, please phone Mark on 0414 763 403.

“The concept of Sahaj is central and pivotal in Guru Nanak’s mystical thought. It relates to the highest spiritual state humanly attainable and has thus deepest connotations attached to it. The ordinary meaning of Sahaj [is] ‘just what it should be’ or ‘just normal’. In other words, a simple human proposition: that a man should become a man par excellence, a real man; no adhesions, no default, no accretions, no deviations.

But this paradoxical word Sahaj does not go with mere ‘saying’ or verbal expression. It is an actuality, a real human state, a tangible workable human achievement. Guru Nanak himself … experienced directly the blissful union with God and the concomitant divine manifestations attending such beatitude.

Sahaj is originally a Sanskrit word which means ‘having been born together’ and thus something inwardly perceived or intuited along with one’s birth as a human being – a sort of indwelling mystical principle of divine perception given to man as his birthright and therefore, a natural and effortless heritage of divinity ingrained in humanity.

Properly speaking, Sahaj is the very mysticality of religion. It is the acceptance of inwardness and intuitionism as the true basis of religion, to the negation of all ritualistic externalities. Sahaj in this meaning would be the mystical state of a man who has accepted the divine will. Sahaj, thus, is the highest spiritual state attainable in Sikhism. It is the highest bliss.

Sahaj connotes a natural slowness and steadiness required for perfect action. Sahaj is the opposite of inordinate haste. Sahaj is compactness and self-sufficiency, while haste is flippancy and inner weakness. Sahaj would mean equipoise, equanimity and equilibrium. It may be called ‘balanced perspicacity’ or sambuddhata, in the psychological sense. All true balance and true action (which may be called Sahaj-karam, as distinct from the self-willed action) engender aesthetic as well as spiritual pleasure, while spiritual fulfillment produces infinite bliss.”

From a book on Guru Nanak by Dewan Singh

Sahaja Yoga programs were held in Kasbah, MoroccoSahaja Yoga programs have recently been conducted in Morocco. The following letter was written by one of the Sahaja yogis who went to Morocco to help with the presentations.

I just came home from Morocco where I spent a blissful week of spreading vibrations collectively. I just wanted to share with you the tremendous joy, compassion and love I felt over there. Morocco is like the Garden of Allah, its flowers being wonderful; smiling, respectful souls longing to get their self-realisation….

Leafleting was such a joy: people would stop and face you, take the leaflet, ask you what it is about and thank you for the invitation. Some promised to come if God grants it “InshAllah”, and He did!

All three programs were wonderful but the one in Rabat, the royal capital, was the highlight. The seekers joined the Quawalli, clapping and singing in praise of Allah. It was simply wonderful!

We were a group of twelve yogis from France, Switzerland, Austria, England and Morocco. On the day of the programm in Rabat, we were having breakfast all together at a long table and we were discussing how to arrange everything for the program on the same evening. Suddenly everyone was silent and the vibrations were very strong; Shri Mataji was with us at the table. It was such a blessing.

Tassos

The river flows deepRecently I woke up in the middle of the night with an insight into the benefits of giving Vibrations. In Sahaja Yoga the term, Vibrations, refers to feeling the All-pervading Power of God’s Love or Paramchaitanya in our palms, at the top of our heads, and for a sensitive personality, anywhere else on the body. It flows as a cool breeze when the subtle system is balanced and harmonic.

When we “give” Vibrations, this is when we use this flow to clear another person’s subtle system. What happens is like a river. The river flows and becomes broad and deep only when the trickles of water are continuous. Similarly, in human beings, for the Divine Vibrations to flow, we have to facilitate it by constantly finding ways and means to “give” it.

All this insight took no more than a fraction of a second to flood my conscious awareness. The revelation also provided the answer as to how we can achieve this, i.e., by “giving” Vibrations, using all the methods that have been devised for us by Shri Mataji, to everything that comes into our attention – people, things, animals, plants, events, situations. Develop a habit; make it second nature. If each of us were to do this we could become broad and deep channels of Vibrations that would merge to become one big ocean of Vibrations.

Greta More

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