Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Friday, November 6, 2009
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
middle path
Monday, October 19, 2009
Saturday, October 17, 2009
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Million Suns
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
This is what we are heading towards
listen to the second half of the show...
Please Listen
When man interferes with the Tao,
the sky becomes filthy,
the earth becomes depleted,
the equilibrium crumbles
creatures become extinct
(Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching, ca. 550 BCE)
please read
Continue to love - always.
Please Listen
When man interferes with the Tao,
the sky becomes filthy,
the earth becomes depleted,
the equilibrium crumbles
creatures become extinct
(Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching, ca. 550 BCE)
please read
Continue to love - always.
Everlasting Presence
I am a clearing
an infinite zero point
through which the universe moves
in all its complexity
there is no center in my existence
just infinite space
that is inseparable
from manifestation
There is no seer
nor perceiver
when I see
I look out from nothing
(supreme awareness isn't really nothing though)
I am nowhere
there are just forms and appearances
the universe moves in me and through me
as I move through it
there is no boundary
between me and the world
there is no inside and outside
no place were I stop and others begin
Other people are manifestations
in the field of awareness
in essence no different
than my own body
When people talk to me
its really no different
than talking to myself
in a different voice
when people display strong emotions
I can feel this happen in the body of my universe
when I am in a group of people
my mind expands and more is happening
(by Fenner)
an infinite zero point
through which the universe moves
in all its complexity
there is no center in my existence
just infinite space
that is inseparable
from manifestation
There is no seer
nor perceiver
when I see
I look out from nothing
(supreme awareness isn't really nothing though)
I am nowhere
there are just forms and appearances
the universe moves in me and through me
as I move through it
there is no boundary
between me and the world
there is no inside and outside
no place were I stop and others begin
Other people are manifestations
in the field of awareness
in essence no different
than my own body
When people talk to me
its really no different
than talking to myself
in a different voice
when people display strong emotions
I can feel this happen in the body of my universe
when I am in a group of people
my mind expands and more is happening
(by Fenner)
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
one of my teachers
She talks about the beautiful Ecovillage park in Brasil, living together in sustainability. Parks for everyone make the mind calmer. 20 minutes a day in a park for children make a huge difference in their stress level. The interviewer asks how do we do this in the cities where there are no parks? We have to make them! People die from stress.
We have to take time out to breath in our everyday life. Stress is your enemy. It helps to tell you when to stop. There is an island of calm inside of me – meditation. Every human being can breathe – breathing is medicine. It is magic. Meditation, nature and breathing all create calm in our lives amongst the chaos. Happiness is not running after material things. What is happiness? Learning how to listen to others. Don’t try and resolve the problems, just breath, and listen…
love love love and more love
(translated partly by Anjalijii)
yes...

Unending Love
I seem to have loved you in numberless forms, numberless times...
In life after life, in age after age, forever.
My spellbound heart has made and remade the necklace of songs,
That you take as a gift, wear round your neck in your many forms,
In life after life, in age after age, forever.
Whenever I hear old chronicles of love, it's age old pain,
It's ancient tale of being apart or together.
As I stare on and on into the past, in the end you emerge,
Clad in the light of a pole-star, piercing the darkness of time.
You become an image of what is remembered forever.
You and I have floated here on the stream that brings from the fount.
At the heart of time, love of one for another.
We have played along side millions of lovers,
Shared in the same shy sweetness of meeting,
the distressful tears of farewell,
Old love but in shapes that renew and renew forever.
Today it is heaped at your feet, it has found its end in you
The love of all man's days both past and forever:
Universal joy, universal sorrow, universal life.
The memories of all loves merging with this one love of ours -
And the songs of every poet past and forever.
~Rabindranath Tagore
Monday, October 5, 2009
Friday, October 2, 2009
yes this is where to go

"If there is love, there is hope that one may have real families, real brotherhood, real equanimity, real peace. If the love within your mind is lost and you see other beings as enemies, then no matter how much knowledge or education or material comfort you have, only suffering and confusion will ensue"
His Holiness the Dalai Lama from 'The little book of Buddhism'
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
love

When you remember your spiritual connection to All That Is, you live in a most joyous state ... wherever you are, whatever you are doing . Intend today that the Sweetest Love imaginable, like a torrent of rushing water, washes simultaneously over and through the hearts of every man, woman, and child who walk this Earth. And Intend that from that moment of Grace forward, all seven billion of us on Earth have a reference point to remind us of how good life can be when we are filled to the brim with Love for ALL.
Tony Burroughs, Intenders Bridge
www.intenders.org
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
the special place to sing from
World peace begins with inner peace.
What is reflected on the outer
is merely a mirror of what is on the inner.
Trying to change the world
without working to change consciousness
is like trying to change the image in a mirror
without changing the object that is being reflected.
The physical environment and circumstances we experience
are merely a reflection of our consciousness ...
the true creative force.
Carol Hansen Grey
LOVE PEACE LIGHT
What is reflected on the outer
is merely a mirror of what is on the inner.
Trying to change the world
without working to change consciousness
is like trying to change the image in a mirror
without changing the object that is being reflected.
The physical environment and circumstances we experience
are merely a reflection of our consciousness ...
the true creative force.
Carol Hansen Grey
LOVE PEACE LIGHT
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Our Life is a Love Message

this is a special pressie to watch today...
today on a note was written the following "no one" - is one when we are ONE - not even one as a thought - not even this nor that - as this is that is something other than that - other than peace - under true peace - not even knowing - this peace with knowing - this peace beyond thought says "no one is HERE" - and, "we all are HERE" - "no one is ONE" and "we all are ONE" - will you go to NOWHERE and EVERYWHERE with me?- The Koan of paradoxes are the greatest miracles.
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
...
how will this play out - we don't know -
It feels like tennis: bail out reversed :-)
http://www.cnbc.com/id/32962379
Blessings indeed!
Monday, September 21, 2009
where to go but HERE
why respond to pulls of new limitations
when over stimulation blankets the sky
embraced by the darker clouds
the fog is clouding visions
yet, lost starbeams gently peak through
touch through the whirlpool of emotions
what is the exact way out
understand the hearts devotion
no one wants to walk a path of suffering
that which leads to the goal divine
that alone can respond with open arms
when walking without desires
and bathing in the moment
when missing anything is not an issue
here the arms are holding the heart
here the hearts are merging
with the divine
at any time
Sunday, September 20, 2009
A Light

being mildly or strongly attached
to some force - perhaps another miracle
these anticipated moments flow away
a thousand times all over me
a million times - surrender again
realize that this perhaps too
is suffering - perhaps mildly so
nevertheless - one can be aware
of what this is again?
offer this desire away
will this lotus be taken from me?
some flowers are too heavy to carry
still they are all beautiful
they come from you
cherish the heavy flower
you are a light heart
Saturday, September 19, 2009
surrender

while listening to eternal space
watch how a dry desert grew a new tree
there is a place in our heart
which can surrender all what was lived
all that was given and taken
that which made the heart feel...
... feel heavy and light
whatever it is
is given away
through the distant blue sky
the rainbow rays of beauty accept
all flowers of the giving heart
the distance between two points
can only be as small and as far
as our thoughts permit
what was given away through space
is nothing much really....
a thought, a feeling, a condition
whatever it was which was given
is endlessly wondrous
in lightness and in heaviness
to be understood in the giving
to be heard as a far distant song
is to appreciate a unique melody
can you not see how distance is near?
how your heart and your music
creates nothing but happiness
in all the worlds?
surrender your song
and all melodies
from your heavy
and light heart

Blessings!
Friday, September 18, 2009
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
there is nowhere to go

where can one hide when there is nowhere to hide?
what does really exist outside of HERE?
inside the heart of the sun
the smallest diamond touches infinity
by thinking about the inner home
all resistance melts away
the unconditional always echoes back
the melody of love and union
what was given in love
is returning as love
how can we stop absorption from carrying
when this brings nothing but happiness?
when eyes start to shine
and the mind flies high
when tears flow
into an ocean of love
remember the smiles
remember the smiles
of all you love
of the ONE you love
remember love offered
that what is resting now
in the unconditional
the Beloved and you
duality and non-duality
unites through devotion
who cares about
mine and yours
when there is only JUST THIS
HERE...
... there is nowhere to go
For all the Yogis to love (singular and plural, dual and non-dual)
Blessings!
there are 8 videos of the following
at youtube...
We can think up a bright future for all beings... lets do it!
Monday, September 14, 2009
must read
A BUDDHIST PERSPECTIVE ON CLIMATE CHANGE:
WITH OUR THOUGHTS WE CHANGE THE WORLD
Shi Wuling
Everything is manifested by the mind and altered by the consciousness. In other words, with our thoughts we create the world. As Buddhists, we learn that our greed results in floods. Angry thoughts result in fires, and ignorant thoughts are the cause of disasters involving wind. This is causality: every cause will have a result. As we continuously crave more power, more material goods and experiences, and we fail to obtain what we desire, the results—like natural disasters and environmental degradation—likewise intensify.
When we look around, consider what we see…(Click link for downloadable eBook.)
Buddhis Perspectives on Climate Change abd Peak Oil
blog:
http://sharonastyk.com/

Peace!
WITH OUR THOUGHTS WE CHANGE THE WORLD
Shi Wuling
Everything is manifested by the mind and altered by the consciousness. In other words, with our thoughts we create the world. As Buddhists, we learn that our greed results in floods. Angry thoughts result in fires, and ignorant thoughts are the cause of disasters involving wind. This is causality: every cause will have a result. As we continuously crave more power, more material goods and experiences, and we fail to obtain what we desire, the results—like natural disasters and environmental degradation—likewise intensify.
When we look around, consider what we see…(Click link for downloadable eBook.)
Buddhis Perspectives on Climate Change abd Peak Oil
blog:
http://sharonastyk.com/

Peace!
Saturday, September 12, 2009

One day the sun admitted
I am just a shadow
I wish I could show you
The Infinite Incandescence
That has cast my brilliant image!
I wish I could show you
When you are lonely or in the darkness
The Astonishing Light
Of your own Being!!
The spirit of the sun whispers
to me
it says...
Go ahead you can do it
Shine...
Like me....
There is darkness
and you can be the flame
of one candle
Without shame....
Hafiz
There are 12 parts to this movie on yoube.
Blessings!
Peace
Friday, September 11, 2009
love

no matter how hard it is to forget
sometimes it is not possible
to do just that
a sense of sincerity increases day by day
as love expands in proportion
when the sky and the ocean unite
at the horizon line
the words of LOVE imprint deeper
this devotion can not be forgotten
deep inside it's known
there is no way to hide devotion
in dreams and awake
unexpected sweetness reveals
conveys in ever new ways
the ways of the unconditional
one may ask the universe
are we able to embrace THIS
even if it is never expressed externally?
see, that which is termed as "true love"
it still is really "all there is"
there is really only
this ONE love
this love truly
never vanishes
it just continues
it just always IS
He looks as if in chanting/kiirtan devotional mode.
Through my love for you,
I want to express my love for the whole cosmos,
the whole of humanity, and all beings.
By living with you, I want to learn to love everyone and all species.
If I succeed in loving you, I will be able to love everyone and all ...species on Earth...
This is the real message of love.
~ by Thich Nhat Hanh
Big LOVE to all
Belssings and infinite unconditional love!
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Monday, September 7, 2009
Be the "Let Go"

when the heart is free flowing
unbound by all stories
allow all life to touch
resisting nothing
think through the sun
the moon
or the stars
there is a resting point
within the sweetness of the heart
feel a pull to surrender
naturally
and
effortlessly
The part written about compassion is for you!
Sunday, September 6, 2009
cheerful
Unconditional Cheerfulness
Transplanting the moon of wakefulness into your heart and the sun of wisdom into your head can be natural and obvious. It is not so much trying to look for the bright side of life and using that side of things as a stepping stone, but it is discovering unconditional cheerfulness, which has no other side. It is just one side, one taste. From that, the natural sense of goodness begins to dawn in your heart. Therefore, whatever we experience, whatever we see, whatever we hear, whatever we think — all those activities begin to have some sense of holiness or sacredness in them. The world is full of hospitality at that point. Sharp corners begin to dissolve and the darkness begins to be uplifted in our lives. Please don't think this is too good to be true. That kind of goodness is unconditionally good, and at that point, we become a decent human being and a warrior. Such an approach has to be accompanied by the sitting practice of meditation. The practice of meditation acts as a training ground and stronghold. Out of that, the seed of friendliness begins to occur. The main point is to appreciate your world. That kind of world is known as the vajra, or indestructible, world. It is a cheerful world. It never becomes too good or too bad.
Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
Transplanting the moon of wakefulness into your heart and the sun of wisdom into your head can be natural and obvious. It is not so much trying to look for the bright side of life and using that side of things as a stepping stone, but it is discovering unconditional cheerfulness, which has no other side. It is just one side, one taste. From that, the natural sense of goodness begins to dawn in your heart. Therefore, whatever we experience, whatever we see, whatever we hear, whatever we think — all those activities begin to have some sense of holiness or sacredness in them. The world is full of hospitality at that point. Sharp corners begin to dissolve and the darkness begins to be uplifted in our lives. Please don't think this is too good to be true. That kind of goodness is unconditionally good, and at that point, we become a decent human being and a warrior. Such an approach has to be accompanied by the sitting practice of meditation. The practice of meditation acts as a training ground and stronghold. Out of that, the seed of friendliness begins to occur. The main point is to appreciate your world. That kind of world is known as the vajra, or indestructible, world. It is a cheerful world. It never becomes too good or too bad.
Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
Saturday, September 5, 2009
just a thought flew by
In this visible world you receive tanmátras in accordance with your strength and ability. When the tanmátric vibration is more powerful than your strength or capacity, you are unable to receive it. Similarly, when the vibrational momentum is more slow and slack than your power of perception, you cannot receive it either. If people whisper in a soft voice, you cannot hear them – there you become deaf. Then again, if there is a very loud noise somewhere nearby, you cannot hear that either, for your hearing has been stunned – here too you are deaf. Your system may easily endure petty mental afflictions and in that case you do not cry before people. Then when you are filled with extreme grief you become so dazed and bewildered that in this case, too, you do not cry before people. You have seen a child suddenly stops crying in the midst of intense suffering. We call it “choked in crying”, for the child is unable to endure the violent sorrowful vibrations. You can tolerate a small pain with a smiling face and people cannot detect your hurt. An intense pain stuns you into unconsciousness and then, too, people are not aware of it. You are able to utter pathetic cries of “Ah” and “Oh” only in the intervening state to embellish your plight.
You cannot perceive the essences of ultra-subtle and ultra-crude entities: it is beyond your mental capacity to receive their vibrational waves and that is why, you cannot normally detect their existence. There are many birds and reptiles that can receive the premonitive vibrations of an event before its actual materialization. A frog detects the pre-indication of rains long before many other living beings do: it catches the premonitory vibrations beforehand and keeps croaking the announcement of the forthcoming happiness to the four winds. Normally humans, however, cannot know anything before the rain actually starts, for the requisite subtle mechanism to receive the pre-rain vibrations is not well developed in them. So for forecast they have to take recourse to meteorology and use a special type of scientific instrument.
A crow has a natural premonitive instinct regarding storms. An owl and to some extent a dog can sense beforehand the possible occurrence of an earthquake or some other unforeseen natural calamity of great magnitude. Such power of apprehending phenomenal vibrations exists not in ten or twenty but in innumerable species of birds. Such a power is indeed of paramount necessity in their rigorous struggle for survival. Such a power did exist, too, to some extent, among the prehistoric people. But today, in this age of so-called civilization, human beings, having become extremely ease-loving, have lost that power through misuse and lack of necessity; just as their tails, their ability to move their ears* and their capacity to hold things with their feet have disappeared. Now the hairiness of their bodies and the strength of their teeth and nails are also becoming extinct. The greater the preoccupation of creatures with the struggle for existence, the necessarily greater must be their power of premonition or prescience of impending danger, or else their existence will be effaced from the surface of the earth – this is the law of nature.
Those creatures that pulsate in the darkness of the deep sea are blind due to the darkness; and hence by natural law, just as their bodies possess the power to radiate light, so as weapons some of them possess sensitive spines, some have glandular poison jets and some have attractive voices. With the help of these, they compensate for their lack of visual perception of form-vibrations and preserve their own existence by their subtler reception of other tanmátras or vibrations.
---------------------------
Meditation on the Infinite Loving Consciousness: "An authentic mantra has an inherent spiritual power, and that power is unleashed when the mind finds parallelism with the mantra. The elevating, sublime effect of the mantra consistently strikes at the root of the Avidya force in the mind. So, what is the essence of the mantra from where it derives it’s power? Pure Love. The subject of the mantra is the Supreme Being – the Infinite Loving Consciousness. Ideation (concentrating the mind on the Idea) on the Supreme progressively works to dislodge the Avidya force from the mind?
Phálgunii Púrnimá 1956 DMC
Baba
You cannot perceive the essences of ultra-subtle and ultra-crude entities: it is beyond your mental capacity to receive their vibrational waves and that is why, you cannot normally detect their existence. There are many birds and reptiles that can receive the premonitive vibrations of an event before its actual materialization. A frog detects the pre-indication of rains long before many other living beings do: it catches the premonitory vibrations beforehand and keeps croaking the announcement of the forthcoming happiness to the four winds. Normally humans, however, cannot know anything before the rain actually starts, for the requisite subtle mechanism to receive the pre-rain vibrations is not well developed in them. So for forecast they have to take recourse to meteorology and use a special type of scientific instrument.
A crow has a natural premonitive instinct regarding storms. An owl and to some extent a dog can sense beforehand the possible occurrence of an earthquake or some other unforeseen natural calamity of great magnitude. Such power of apprehending phenomenal vibrations exists not in ten or twenty but in innumerable species of birds. Such a power is indeed of paramount necessity in their rigorous struggle for survival. Such a power did exist, too, to some extent, among the prehistoric people. But today, in this age of so-called civilization, human beings, having become extremely ease-loving, have lost that power through misuse and lack of necessity; just as their tails, their ability to move their ears* and their capacity to hold things with their feet have disappeared. Now the hairiness of their bodies and the strength of their teeth and nails are also becoming extinct. The greater the preoccupation of creatures with the struggle for existence, the necessarily greater must be their power of premonition or prescience of impending danger, or else their existence will be effaced from the surface of the earth – this is the law of nature.
Those creatures that pulsate in the darkness of the deep sea are blind due to the darkness; and hence by natural law, just as their bodies possess the power to radiate light, so as weapons some of them possess sensitive spines, some have glandular poison jets and some have attractive voices. With the help of these, they compensate for their lack of visual perception of form-vibrations and preserve their own existence by their subtler reception of other tanmátras or vibrations.
---------------------------
Meditation on the Infinite Loving Consciousness: "An authentic mantra has an inherent spiritual power, and that power is unleashed when the mind finds parallelism with the mantra. The elevating, sublime effect of the mantra consistently strikes at the root of the Avidya force in the mind. So, what is the essence of the mantra from where it derives it’s power? Pure Love. The subject of the mantra is the Supreme Being – the Infinite Loving Consciousness. Ideation (concentrating the mind on the Idea) on the Supreme progressively works to dislodge the Avidya force from the mind?
Phálgunii Púrnimá 1956 DMC
Baba
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
dust in the wind - impermanence
I close my eyes
Only for a moment, then the momen't gone
All my dreams
Pass before my eyes, a curiosity
Dust in the wind
All they are is dust in the wind Same old song
Just a drop of water in an endless sea
All we do
Crumbles to the ground, though we refuse to see
Dust in the wind
All we are is dust in the wind, ohh Now, don't hang on
Nothing lasts forever but the earth and sky
It slips away
And all your money won't another minute buy
Dust in the wind
All we are is dust in the wind
All we are is dust in the wind Dust in the wind
Everything is dust in the wind
Everything is dust in the wind
The wind
care
The sun is a symbol of compassion and "spiritual victory" and is situated in the heart, now, always and forever - free moving, without desire, and unconditional aware and accepting of all there is, non dual... this is what we really want - to go to a place without suffering and only highest and deepest loving awareness. All are included and accepted without exception, and at this non-place of ultimate freedom and limitlessness and love you are not anymore alone ever.
You are welcome to join any day!
--------------------
Oh, dear companion - come to my village - that lies beyond the sovereign suvam'areka' river - when walking along the seaside - come to that river - the path leads across the dunes of the sea - when the sun rises there - the sky and the sea bloom with color - that color awakens my mind - and gives me infinite pleasure - In the cashew nut orchard - the colored birds always dance - the hawks fly over to unknowns places - the sailor starts his journey - hearing the far song of the rivers current - he moves towards the sea - without any other thought in mind.
(Song Number: 911 from Bengali Song Poetry by P.R. Sarkar)
Music: Soja
Chant: Baba Nam Kevalam - means: "only the name of the Beloved within"
From My Heart To Yours - Be Always Surrounded By Sweetest Heart Peace
Friday, August 28, 2009
Thursday, August 27, 2009
says love
It is nonsense,
says reason.
It is what it is,
says love.
It is a misfortune,
says calculation.
It is nothing but pain,
says fear.
It is hopeless,
says examination.
It is what is it,
says love.
It is ridiculous,
says pride.
It is careless,
says care.
It is impossible,
says experience.
It is what it is,
says love.
(Erich Fried)
says reason.
It is what it is,
says love.
It is a misfortune,
says calculation.
It is nothing but pain,
says fear.
It is hopeless,
says examination.
It is what is it,
says love.
It is ridiculous,
says pride.
It is careless,
says care.
It is impossible,
says experience.
It is what it is,
says love.
(Erich Fried)
Monday, August 24, 2009
Spacious


"Impermanence is a cause for celebration. Impermanence is our opportunity to discover presence. Present moments are infinite. They will never end. We will never cease to have opportunities to start again. We will never cease to have opportunities to experience presence."
Spacious Passion, Ngakma Nor’dzin
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Coming and Going


I am going off into the sunset,
Their will never be a time that your not inside of me.
For no matter how far I leave, I always come back to you.
The sun rises and sets, my love for you never left.
There is a journey and a path I must take.
The travels of a monk is lonely and hard to take.
With only a robe and a bowl and my love in hand.
My only wish is to see this land live in love and light
Said Sadmonk
There is only arriving for now!
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
from nowhere to everywhere
today is another very hot Summer day
and the garden is all dried up
still who is living in your hearts place
at the place which only knows highest love?
there is always a universe of change
and wherever we are
all thoughts and images only come to fade away
and we don't really know
how appearances rise and fade
like an ocean wave or a kind breeze in the wind
the birds of the Summer do sing along kindly
expressing their welcome to one and all life
in this creation of immense beauty
we all shine in this overflowing effulgence
can you in your own presence sense total agreement?
today, in the sweet flow of subtle thoughts
lovingness spreads to all and everywhere
soft eyes look out in total amazement
towards this place of ever ending flowing devotion
this love keeps creating beauty in silence
can you see how these words come and go -
from nowhere to everywhere
all at once?
Om Shanti
Just be at Peace!
and the garden is all dried up
still who is living in your hearts place
at the place which only knows highest love?
there is always a universe of change
and wherever we are
all thoughts and images only come to fade away
and we don't really know
how appearances rise and fade
like an ocean wave or a kind breeze in the wind
the birds of the Summer do sing along kindly
expressing their welcome to one and all life
in this creation of immense beauty
we all shine in this overflowing effulgence
can you in your own presence sense total agreement?
today, in the sweet flow of subtle thoughts
lovingness spreads to all and everywhere
soft eyes look out in total amazement
towards this place of ever ending flowing devotion
this love keeps creating beauty in silence
can you see how these words come and go -
from nowhere to everywhere
all at once?
Om Shanti
Just be at Peace!
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Movie
FILM - SAMSARA part 1
Vezi mai multe video din Film
Divided onto 10 parts under playlist to the right... with English subtitles
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Friday, August 14, 2009
Just This

in a dream
a vibrational flower field appeared
here were the flowers always bloom
and the clouds drift along in peace
absorbed in slow moving compassion
we all meet again and again -
without speaking
people come to stay together in silence
to gaze into a far horizon
towards a distant place
with no reference point
many wanted to say something
something that has caused a deep wound
but without telling
they usually all leave in silence
these unspoken words
will melt away one day
like a snowflake in the ocean
only the flowers will know
about THAT which cannot be spoken about
about THAT which is without words
About THAT which JUST IS
JUST THIS
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
Thin Mind
the ever thinning mind
will now become infinite
nothing left to understand
keep hiding - or show up
hidden in deep ocean
or traveling the endless skies
for the thinning mind
all coming and going stops
hidden in every grain of sand
and in the melody of dancing clouds
the rising and falling of all emotions
and in the unconditional universal mind
for the thinning mind
all coming and going stops
with in the heart's sun
the thinning mind expands
tell me, even after knowing THIS
why do we forget?
here...
we cannot look away
will now become infinite
nothing left to understand
keep hiding - or show up
hidden in deep ocean
or traveling the endless skies
for the thinning mind
all coming and going stops
hidden in every grain of sand
and in the melody of dancing clouds
the rising and falling of all emotions
and in the unconditional universal mind
for the thinning mind
all coming and going stops
with in the heart's sun
the thinning mind expands
tell me, even after knowing THIS
why do we forget?
here...
we cannot look away
Monday, August 10, 2009
Sunday, August 9, 2009
sweet
You don't have to do anything with your mind,
just let it naturally rest in it's essential nature.
Your own mind, unagitated, is reality.
Meditate on this without distraction.
Know the Truth beyond all opposites.
Thoughts are like bubbles that form and dissolve in clear water.
Thoughts are not distinct from the absolute Reality,
so relax, there is no need to be critical.
Whatever arises, whatever occurs,
simply don't cling to it, but immediately let it go.
What you see, hear, and touch are your own mind.
There is nothing but mind.
Mind transcends birth and death.
The essence of mind is pure Consciousness that never leaves reality,
even though it experiences the things of the senses.
In the equanimity of the Absolute, there is nothing to renounce or attain.
-Niguma
just let it naturally rest in it's essential nature.
Your own mind, unagitated, is reality.
Meditate on this without distraction.
Know the Truth beyond all opposites.
Thoughts are like bubbles that form and dissolve in clear water.
Thoughts are not distinct from the absolute Reality,
so relax, there is no need to be critical.
Whatever arises, whatever occurs,
simply don't cling to it, but immediately let it go.
What you see, hear, and touch are your own mind.
There is nothing but mind.
Mind transcends birth and death.
The essence of mind is pure Consciousness that never leaves reality,
even though it experiences the things of the senses.
In the equanimity of the Absolute, there is nothing to renounce or attain.
-Niguma
Friday, August 7, 2009
he teaches us to face everything
http://www.live365.com/stations/michael2013/schedule
How to resolve the impact of childhood trauma now affecting our adult experience without pharmaceuticals or verbal therapy.
He teaches us to face everything with courage.
Yogis are of all kinds
Vajrayogini dances on the ego.
Devotional Tantra
people who live in ancient lands
are rich at heart but poor otherwise
my friend, come and visit the poorest of the poor
your family with a rich heart is waiting for you
please take rest here for a while and eat with them
and listen to the pains and pleasures
the song and stories
of the people of the heart
they all are the kings and queens
of the unconditional kingdom
as you have been a father
as you have been a mother
as you have been a beloved child
you know the longing and the truth
of the people of the heart
is the same longing as your own
so many have given their body and mind
to the unconditional loving mind
their breath rises into the sky
so vast and so open and free
my dear friend
please listen to their songs
they people of the heart know...
they know the songs
of the heart's victory sun
This too is tantra... caring tantra... where darkness is removed by a glimpse of the victory sun's devotional love light.
Here too yogis dance on their ego... by doing loving service, sadhana (service to the universe) and unconditional offering to all beings alike.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Different Yoga - Inspiring Moments
Tibetian Yoga Masters 1/3
Tibetian Yoga Masters 2/3
Tibetian Yoga Masters 3/3
Tibetan Buddhist Monks - Meditation and Science
Tibetian Yoga Masters 2/3
Tibetian Yoga Masters 3/3
Tibetan Buddhist Monks - Meditation and Science
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
More Of THIS - Heaven And Earth Are Also Trustwrothy
Chogyam Trungpa’s recipes for the “Heaven and Earth Sandwich” - (Share)
“Imagine,” wrote Chogyam Trungpa, “that you are sitting naked on the ground, with your bare bottom touching the earth. Since you are not wearing a scarf or hat, you are also exposed to heaven above.
“You are sandwiched between heaven and earth: a naked man or woman, sitting between heaven and earth… - “Earth is always earth. The earth will let anyone sit on it, and earth never gives way. It never lets you go — you don’t drop off this earth and go flying through outer space. Likewise, sky is always sky; heaven is always heaven above you. Whether it is snowing or raining or the sun is shining, whether it is daytime or nighttime, the sky is always there. In that sense, we know that heaven and earth are trustworthy.” –from “The Genuine Heart of Sadness,” in Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior (Shambhala Library Edition), page 28.
And maybe, Trungpa Rinpoche suggested in this conversation with a student, you needn’t “imagine” at all:
Student: Could you say something about what you mean by heaven and earth?
Chogyam Trungpa: What do you think it could be? Do you have any ideas?… What’s earth?
Student: Well, that’s where I’m sitting.
Chogyam Trungpa: Good. From that, you can tell what heaven is. It’s our reference point with each other.
Student: But that sounds like being in the middle of a sandwich.
Chogyam Trungpa: Well, maybe you are in a sandwich. We’re always sandwiched because we have a past, we have a present, and we have a future. We are sandwiched by our father, our mother, our child. Even timewise, we are sandwiched. We are sandwiched between breakfast, lunch and dinner.
From “How to Cultivate the Great Eastern Sun,” in Great Eastern Sun: The Wisdom of Shambhala, pages 112 to 113.
--------------
on the day of union
bathed in the rays of the morning sun
no ill feeling lingered
the fragrance of flowers
and the smile of life
removed all mental afflictions
between heaven and earth
amidst dry desert
rain peace
between the crimson hue of the morning sun
and the tender red color of the evening sky
the fragrance of ca’mpa’ and ketakii fills the air
blows a heavenly fragrance
between heaven and earth
(some words translated from Bengali from my mentor's lovely song poetry)
“Imagine,” wrote Chogyam Trungpa, “that you are sitting naked on the ground, with your bare bottom touching the earth. Since you are not wearing a scarf or hat, you are also exposed to heaven above.
“You are sandwiched between heaven and earth: a naked man or woman, sitting between heaven and earth… - “Earth is always earth. The earth will let anyone sit on it, and earth never gives way. It never lets you go — you don’t drop off this earth and go flying through outer space. Likewise, sky is always sky; heaven is always heaven above you. Whether it is snowing or raining or the sun is shining, whether it is daytime or nighttime, the sky is always there. In that sense, we know that heaven and earth are trustworthy.” –from “The Genuine Heart of Sadness,” in Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior (Shambhala Library Edition), page 28.
And maybe, Trungpa Rinpoche suggested in this conversation with a student, you needn’t “imagine” at all:
Student: Could you say something about what you mean by heaven and earth?
Chogyam Trungpa: What do you think it could be? Do you have any ideas?… What’s earth?
Student: Well, that’s where I’m sitting.
Chogyam Trungpa: Good. From that, you can tell what heaven is. It’s our reference point with each other.
Student: But that sounds like being in the middle of a sandwich.
Chogyam Trungpa: Well, maybe you are in a sandwich. We’re always sandwiched because we have a past, we have a present, and we have a future. We are sandwiched by our father, our mother, our child. Even timewise, we are sandwiched. We are sandwiched between breakfast, lunch and dinner.
From “How to Cultivate the Great Eastern Sun,” in Great Eastern Sun: The Wisdom of Shambhala, pages 112 to 113.
--------------
on the day of union
bathed in the rays of the morning sun
no ill feeling lingered
the fragrance of flowers
and the smile of life
removed all mental afflictions
between heaven and earth
amidst dry desert
rain peace
between the crimson hue of the morning sun
and the tender red color of the evening sky
the fragrance of ca’mpa’ and ketakii fills the air
blows a heavenly fragrance
between heaven and earth
(some words translated from Bengali from my mentor's lovely song poetry)
Thursday, July 30, 2009
be at home
on order to receive the guest
one must be at home
this home can not be localized
who is host and
who is guest
can not be known
neither can one say
to whom this space belongs
yet, we are in this together
love says, "I am everything."
wisdom says,"I'm nothing."
between the two my life flows
(--- by Shri Nisargadatta)
one must be at home
this home can not be localized
who is host and
who is guest
can not be known
neither can one say
to whom this space belongs
yet, we are in this together
love says, "I am everything."
wisdom says,"I'm nothing."
between the two my life flows
(--- by Shri Nisargadatta)
Monday, July 27, 2009
The Lotus and the Sun
lotus and sun
unites heaven and earth
unites Purusha and Prkrti
is devotion
is love
is radiance
ever new
ever fresh
complete
we act
to serve
as it comes
watch the speed
the movement
that is all there is
this is it
this is
this
.
non dual and dual -complement each other...
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Unite Heaven and Earth


The application of "unconditional awareness" as described in above mentioned book, into our day to day circumstance is perhaps "the ultimate healing" in Buddhism and also in many other yoga paths. Exploring this presence and ways of how it weaves in and out from meditation into the practicalities of our real life is causing the heart to become very light and the mind to clear of puzzling paradoxes. Perhaps this journey will help some to close the gap between heaven and earth, between duality and non-duality. We will be less inclined to be puzzled and surprised by the experience of drifting in and out from different states of awareness and the need to find "gain and loss" in practice and setting rising events and situations apart from one another.
Let's see were the journey goes and embrace the never ending paradox, the matrix, which is really a close friend. This experience maybe unifying and liberating, so get ready for the never ending beautiful NOW presence...
Love and Light!
Invisible
develop into bloom
flowers dance with wind
some wither
some invite demons
to have tea
and become peaceful
a waterlily in water
has no ripples
a journey towards less density
we descend and ascend
from dense and heavy
to feather light
some of us become invisible
then sky and water and earth
dance as one light
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Easy or Not Easy - Try to Make No Distinction
HSIN HSIN MING
Verses on the Faith Mind by The 3rd Zen Patriarch, Sengstau
The Great Way is not difficult for those who have no preferences. When love and hate are both absent everything becomes clear and undisguised. Make the smallest distinction, however, and heaven and earth are set infinitely apart.
If you wish to see the truth then hold no opinions for or against anything. To set up what you like against what you dislike is the disease of the mind.
When the deep meaning of things is not understood the mind's essential peace is disturbed to no avail.
The Way is perfect like vast space when nothing is lacking and nothing is in excess.
Indeed, it is due to our choosing to accept or reject that we do not see the true nature of things.
Live neither in the entanglements of outer things nor in inner feelings of emptiness.
Be serene in the oneness of things and such erroneous views will disappear by themselves.
When you try to stop activity to achieve passivity your very effort fills you with activity.
As long as you remain in one extreme or the other you will never know Oneness.
Those who do not live in the single Way fail in both activity and passivity, assertion and denial.
To deny the reality of things is to miss their reality; to assert the emptiness of things is to miss their reality.
The more you talk and think about it, the further astray you wander from the truth.
Stop talking and thinking, and there is nothing you will not be able to know.
To return to the root is to find the meaning, but to pursue appearances is to miss the source.
At the moment of inner enlightenment there is a going beyond appearance and emptiness.
The changes that appear to occur in the empty world we call real only because of our ignorance.
Do not search for the truth; only cease to cherish opinions.
Do not remain in the dualistic state -- avoid such pursuits carefully.
If there is even a trace of this and that, of right and wrong, the Mind-essence will be lost in confusion.
Although all dualities come from the One, do not be attached even to this One.
When the mind exists undisturbed in the Way, nothing in the world can offend, and when such a thing can no longer offend, it ceases to exist in the old way.
When no discriminating thoughts arise, the old mind ceases to exist.
When thought objects vanish, the thinking-subject vanishes, as when the mind vanishes, objects vanish.
Things are objects because of the subject (mind); the mind (subject) is such because of things (object).
Understand the relativity of these two and the basic reality: the unity of emptiness.
In this emptiness the two are indistinguishable and each contains in itself the whole world.
If you do not discriminate between coarse and fine you will not be tempted to prejudice and opinion.
To live in the Great Way is neither easy nor difficult, but those with limited views are fearful and irresolute; the faster they hurry, the slower they go, and clinging (attachment) cannot be limited; even to be attached to the idea of enlightenment is to go astray.
Just let things be in their own way and there will be neither coming nor going.
Obey the nature of things (your own nature), and you will walk freely and undisturbed.
When thought is in bondage the truth is hidden, for everything is murky and unclear, and the burdensome practice of judging brings annoyance and weariness.
What benefits can be derived from distinctions and separations?
If you wish to move in the One Way do not dislike even the world of senses and ideas.
Indeed, to accept them fully is identical with true Enlightenment.
The wise man strives to no goals but the foolish man fetters himself.
There is one Dharma, not many; distinctions arise from the clinging needs of the ignorant.
To seek Mind with the (discriminating) mind is the greatest of all mistakes.
Rest and unrest derive from illusion; with enlightenment there is no liking and disliking.
All dualities come from ignorant inference. They are like dreams or flowers in air: foolish to try to grasp them.
Gain and loss, right and wrong: such thoughts must finally be abolished at once.
If the eye never sleeps, all dreams will naturally cease.
If the mind makes no discriminations, the ten thousand things are as they are, of single essence.
To understand the mystery of this One-essence is to be released from all entanglements.
When all things are seen equally the timeless Self-essence is reached.
No comparisons or analogies are possible in this causeless, relationless state.
Consider movement stationary and the stationary in motion, both movement and rest disappear.
When such dualities cease to exist Oneness itself cannot exist.
To this ultimate finality no law or description applies.
For the unified mind in accord with the Way all self-centered striving ceases.
Doubts and irresolutions vanish and life in true faith is possible.
With a single stroke we are freed from bondage; nothing clings to us and we hold to nothing.
All is empty, clear, self-illuminating, with no exertion of the mind's power.
Here thought, feeling, knowledge, and imagination are of no value.
In this world of suchness there is neither self nor other-than-self.
To come directly into harmony with this reality just simply say when doubt arises, 'Not two.'
In this 'not two' nothing is separate, nothing is excluded.
No matter when or where, enlightenment means entering this truth.
And this truth is beyond extension or diminution in time or space; in it a single thought is ten thousand years.
Emptiness here, Emptiness there, but the infinite universe stands always before your eyes.
Infinitely large and infinitely small; no difference, for definitions have vanished and no boundaries are seen.
So too with Being and Non-Being.
Don't waste time with doubts and arguments that have nothing to do with this.
One thing, all things: move among and intermingle, without distinction.
To live in this realization is to be without anxiety about non-perfection.
To live in this faith is the road to non-duality, because the non-dual is one with trusting mind.
Words!
The Way is beyond language, for in it there is no yesterday, no tomorrow, no today.
Verses on the Faith Mind by The 3rd Zen Patriarch, Sengstau
The Great Way is not difficult for those who have no preferences. When love and hate are both absent everything becomes clear and undisguised. Make the smallest distinction, however, and heaven and earth are set infinitely apart.
If you wish to see the truth then hold no opinions for or against anything. To set up what you like against what you dislike is the disease of the mind.
When the deep meaning of things is not understood the mind's essential peace is disturbed to no avail.
The Way is perfect like vast space when nothing is lacking and nothing is in excess.
Indeed, it is due to our choosing to accept or reject that we do not see the true nature of things.
Live neither in the entanglements of outer things nor in inner feelings of emptiness.
Be serene in the oneness of things and such erroneous views will disappear by themselves.
When you try to stop activity to achieve passivity your very effort fills you with activity.
As long as you remain in one extreme or the other you will never know Oneness.
Those who do not live in the single Way fail in both activity and passivity, assertion and denial.
To deny the reality of things is to miss their reality; to assert the emptiness of things is to miss their reality.
The more you talk and think about it, the further astray you wander from the truth.
Stop talking and thinking, and there is nothing you will not be able to know.
To return to the root is to find the meaning, but to pursue appearances is to miss the source.
At the moment of inner enlightenment there is a going beyond appearance and emptiness.
The changes that appear to occur in the empty world we call real only because of our ignorance.
Do not search for the truth; only cease to cherish opinions.
Do not remain in the dualistic state -- avoid such pursuits carefully.
If there is even a trace of this and that, of right and wrong, the Mind-essence will be lost in confusion.
Although all dualities come from the One, do not be attached even to this One.
When the mind exists undisturbed in the Way, nothing in the world can offend, and when such a thing can no longer offend, it ceases to exist in the old way.
When no discriminating thoughts arise, the old mind ceases to exist.
When thought objects vanish, the thinking-subject vanishes, as when the mind vanishes, objects vanish.
Things are objects because of the subject (mind); the mind (subject) is such because of things (object).
Understand the relativity of these two and the basic reality: the unity of emptiness.
In this emptiness the two are indistinguishable and each contains in itself the whole world.
If you do not discriminate between coarse and fine you will not be tempted to prejudice and opinion.
To live in the Great Way is neither easy nor difficult, but those with limited views are fearful and irresolute; the faster they hurry, the slower they go, and clinging (attachment) cannot be limited; even to be attached to the idea of enlightenment is to go astray.
Just let things be in their own way and there will be neither coming nor going.
Obey the nature of things (your own nature), and you will walk freely and undisturbed.
When thought is in bondage the truth is hidden, for everything is murky and unclear, and the burdensome practice of judging brings annoyance and weariness.
What benefits can be derived from distinctions and separations?
If you wish to move in the One Way do not dislike even the world of senses and ideas.
Indeed, to accept them fully is identical with true Enlightenment.
The wise man strives to no goals but the foolish man fetters himself.
There is one Dharma, not many; distinctions arise from the clinging needs of the ignorant.
To seek Mind with the (discriminating) mind is the greatest of all mistakes.
Rest and unrest derive from illusion; with enlightenment there is no liking and disliking.
All dualities come from ignorant inference. They are like dreams or flowers in air: foolish to try to grasp them.
Gain and loss, right and wrong: such thoughts must finally be abolished at once.
If the eye never sleeps, all dreams will naturally cease.
If the mind makes no discriminations, the ten thousand things are as they are, of single essence.
To understand the mystery of this One-essence is to be released from all entanglements.
When all things are seen equally the timeless Self-essence is reached.
No comparisons or analogies are possible in this causeless, relationless state.
Consider movement stationary and the stationary in motion, both movement and rest disappear.
When such dualities cease to exist Oneness itself cannot exist.
To this ultimate finality no law or description applies.
For the unified mind in accord with the Way all self-centered striving ceases.
Doubts and irresolutions vanish and life in true faith is possible.
With a single stroke we are freed from bondage; nothing clings to us and we hold to nothing.
All is empty, clear, self-illuminating, with no exertion of the mind's power.
Here thought, feeling, knowledge, and imagination are of no value.
In this world of suchness there is neither self nor other-than-self.
To come directly into harmony with this reality just simply say when doubt arises, 'Not two.'
In this 'not two' nothing is separate, nothing is excluded.
No matter when or where, enlightenment means entering this truth.
And this truth is beyond extension or diminution in time or space; in it a single thought is ten thousand years.
Emptiness here, Emptiness there, but the infinite universe stands always before your eyes.
Infinitely large and infinitely small; no difference, for definitions have vanished and no boundaries are seen.
So too with Being and Non-Being.
Don't waste time with doubts and arguments that have nothing to do with this.
One thing, all things: move among and intermingle, without distinction.
To live in this realization is to be without anxiety about non-perfection.
To live in this faith is the road to non-duality, because the non-dual is one with trusting mind.
Words!
The Way is beyond language, for in it there is no yesterday, no tomorrow, no today.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Spiritual Dance
"Parama Purus'a" (the Supreme "Shiva" or "Krs'na") wants to make the world dance. Everybody will be dancing with His vibrations and in His tune. Parama Purus'a will be enjoying with all. Does "He" not want this? Why should He live in the dry heart of a yogi? He would like a sweet, loving heart--"Sarasa Hrdaya." He will not like the desert. He would like fertile land. So, the heart of a devotee is like the fertile land. That is why Parama Purus'a says, "Mad Bhaktah yatra Ga'yante", i.e., wherever my devotees perform Kiirtan in full swing at once I reach there. You may say that Parama Purus'a is omnipresent. Now Parama Purus'a is omnipotent, He is also omniscient, it is a fact ; but there is a hub of that omniscience, there is a hub of those premonitions and post-monitions of all expressions. A central point is there. Parama Purus'a is omnipresent but He has a nucleus (Cakrana'bhi). Parama Purusa' will place that nucleus wherever He likes. He will take it wherever He likes. Parama Purus'a says, "When my devotees sit single-minded for Kiirtan (Ananyor Mama'ta Vis'n'ormamata')- "I at once take myself there. This is what I do." This morning I said that the practice of Dharma (i.e. Dharma Sa'dhana') is the characteristic of human beings. Now I say, "If you want to be established in Dharma Sa'dhana', then in any case do not forget the importance of Kiirtana, the greatness of Kiirtana, and also the greatness of devotion. Always remember that the devotion begins with aesthetic science and its ultimate domain ends where supra-aesthetic science (Mohana Vijina'na) begins."
(P.R. Sarkar)
4 November 1979, Ahmedabad
The truth is that Kiirtan really puts you into deep presence...
Parama Purusha is the supreme consciousness and Prakrti is the natural expression of this awareness... Both are always in union, just as Shiva and Shakti... Parama Purusha is referred to as "He" but obviously, the great ideas about the Supreme, that which we also all are, is far beyond any gender. It's all a hint to inspire the true accumulation of present moment awareness (that which is infinite to accumulate and which hurts none to enjoy and become), which leads to the vibrational transformation, integration and healing of the core of our beings. When we are seated in our true presence, we are beyond dogma, thought, and any manipulation and fabrication. Follow your heart and see what rings true for you.
(P.R. Sarkar)
4 November 1979, Ahmedabad
The truth is that Kiirtan really puts you into deep presence...
Parama Purusha is the supreme consciousness and Prakrti is the natural expression of this awareness... Both are always in union, just as Shiva and Shakti... Parama Purusha is referred to as "He" but obviously, the great ideas about the Supreme, that which we also all are, is far beyond any gender. It's all a hint to inspire the true accumulation of present moment awareness (that which is infinite to accumulate and which hurts none to enjoy and become), which leads to the vibrational transformation, integration and healing of the core of our beings. When we are seated in our true presence, we are beyond dogma, thought, and any manipulation and fabrication. Follow your heart and see what rings true for you.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Friday, July 10, 2009
- 2012
The Presence Process and 2012 - Through the eyes of Michael Brown -
These articles are noteworthy - all written by Michael Brown - who helped so many to slowly look at themselves, processing feelings, without becoming mental about it. The biggest lesson is to be comfortable with all there is, even if the situation is uncomfortable. We don't need to sedate anything anymore, we don't need to explain anything at all, let it all flow through and do your meditation with a free mind... The energies truly free up.
These articles are noteworthy - all written by Michael Brown - who helped so many to slowly look at themselves, processing feelings, without becoming mental about it. The biggest lesson is to be comfortable with all there is, even if the situation is uncomfortable. We don't need to sedate anything anymore, we don't need to explain anything at all, let it all flow through and do your meditation with a free mind... The energies truly free up.
Resolve Emotions
Feeling all emotional states it is not easy... yet, it is for every one to process. Being with our feelings is being authentic... no analysis maybe necessary as it is too mental and distracts from actual feeling, which is "that what is." Words are not necessary to explain anything as they tend to trick the mind through manipulation to make the ego "feel good." Being with you as YOU, and with your perhaps immature child like emotional being is one of the greatest gift you can give to yourself. Sedation through food, drugs and alcohol does nothing much and only creates further aggravation and dysfunctions. There is nobody who has done it all, no matter how much personal experimentation they have done. Not even the greatest experts can claim to be further ahead, as many of them also still try to learn to "walk their talk." It is best to learn to trust yourself and it can be done by being with you as you, no matter what!
The journey really is, individually and collectively, to process generations of unresolved emotional states. It also is apparent that this world is a direct result of our unresolved emotions, and so is what we manifest in our families and communities. Our memories are coming up as feelings to be processed, to be felt, to allow them to flow through to resolve them, to notice them to look at them, right now. "If we are alive we are processing right now on this planet," so says the speaker in the above video. If we can't process we maybe barely alive and deprive ourselves of the opportunity of at least occasional states of clarity (I avoid the term "awake" as it is too vague of what that really means) - and, of deep inner blissful unity and the joy of the heart. With trust all will come together eventually.
Being present with your being, also leads into meditation when emotions are processed, they clear up naturally and so does the mind. Yet, if one can get ancient hands on instructions about meditation, go for it, as there is much power in the process of initiation, or "diks'a" as it is also called.
Meditation and kiirtan works on the vibrational field. The emotional processing works on the energetic field of the first seven years. Dynamics do and will change when we learn pay unconditional attention to all what we are. No words are necessary to make up stories to resolve the or manipulate energy. Energetic attention is all it takes to bring change. As with everything, patience is the key of "self" mastery and to authenticity. The journey is the goal here. We have arrived. The heart finds peace when it senses that we have already achieved the goal - presence - the journey comes to an end as it NOW only IS...
From My Heart to Yours!
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Saturday, June 20, 2009
On Cooperatives
by P.R. Sarkar
As you know, human society is one and indivisible. A human being cannot live alone. If a person wants to drink water from a well, he or she needs a rope and a bucket, and to tie the rope one needs a hook. For all these things, the help of the others is indispensable.
In society human beings have to work jointly with others so that everybody can move forward collectively. Samánam ejati iti samájah. That is, society is the collective movement of a group of individuals who have made a unanimous decision to move towards a common goal. If human beings move closely together in all aspects of life, except for those few aspects which are very personal, the better it will be for the welfare of society. Only those things which cannot be done collectively should be done individually.
So, it is always better for people to work together as far as possible – the more that human beings work together, the better it is. If this principle is not followed the spirit of society will be broken, adversely affecting the very existence of human beings. People have to eat food individually – another person cannot eat your food for you – however a meal can be shared collectively. Where individuality dominates human life, the environment, the welfare of different groups and even the continued existence of humanity may be adversely affected.
Coordinated Cooperation
“Operation” means “to get something done through any medium or media”. Suppose you are operating a tool machine. If this type of operation is done with collective effort then it is called “cooperation”. In the case of cooperation, something is done with equal rights, equal human prestige and equal locus standi.
In every field of collective life there should be cooperation among the members of society. Where this cooperation is between free human beings, each with equal rights and mutual respect for each other, and each working for the welfare of the other, it is called “coordinated cooperation”. Where people do something individually or collectively, but keep themselves under other people’s supervision, then it is called “subordinated cooperation”. In each and every stratum of life, we should do everything with coordinated cooperation and always avoid subordinated cooperation.
In the world today different socio-economic systems are in vogue, but none of these systems are based on coordinated cooperation. Rather, in these systems social relationships are mainly based on subordinated cooperation, resulting in the degeneration of society’s moral fabric. For example, in some countries there is a glaring lack of racial parity and no coordinated cooperation among the different ethnic groups whatsoever. This lack of proper equilibrium and equipoise in social life is causing the whole structure of society to crumble down.
In those countries that follow the commune system there is also lack of coordinated cooperation. In the commune system society is reduced to merely a production-distribution mechanism under a regimented system of control. Rather than increase production, the commune system forces production down. The consequences can be seen in nearly all communist countries: food shortages. Capitalist countries such as Australia, Canada and the USA are selling their food grains to the Soviet Union and China. Moreover, the workers in a commune do not feel oneness with the job, nor do they have the freedom to express all their potentialities. Such a suffocating and mechanical system fosters a materialistic outlook and produces atheistic leadership.
In the commune system there is no personal ownership. Without a sense of personal ownership people do not labour hard or care for any property. If farmers feel they have permanent usufructuary rights to the land they will get a better out-turn. Such a sentiment is suppressed in the commune system, resulting in sluggish production and psychic oppression. Intelligent people are forced to do work which is unsuitable for them and are paid the same wages as ordinary workers. There is no incentive system and individual initiative by meritorious people is not encouraged, so naturally people do not work hard. Such a system can never solve society’s economic problems, either in agriculture or in industry. Rather, it will only aggravate existing problems and create fresh social problems. The production and distribution systems of the commune system are fundamentally defective, exploitative and anti-human.
The commune system is based on subordinated cooperation – the relationships are those of supervisor and supervised or master and servant. Such relationships are detrimental for human progress and retard any possibility of progressive movement. They are ultravires to the wonts of the human mind.
PROUT supports the implementation of the cooperative system because its inner spirit is one of coordinated cooperation. Only the cooperative system can ensure the healthy, integrated progress of humanity, and establish complete and everlasting unity among the human race. People should work to enjoy sweeter fruits by establishing the cooperative system. PROUT raises the slogans: “We want cooperatives, not communes,” and, “We are not slaves of communes.”
Cooperation in Agriculture
If the spirit of cooperation is followed, those commodities which are essential for supplying the minimum requirements such as food, clothing, housing, education and medical treatment will have to be cooperatively produced. Food is the most important commodity, and because of the importance of food, agriculture is the most important sector of the economy. It is generally the case that the staple food of a country is also its main food crop. In Bengal, for example, the main food is rice and so paddy is the main crop. Similarly, the main crop in the Punjab is wheat, in Ireland potato, and in Scotland rye, oats and barley.
For the proper reorganization and maximum utilization of agricultural land, the cooperative system is most preferable. The fertility of the soil depends upon the natural terrain of the countryside, and the size of a harvest depends largely upon the water content of the soil. High land will not generally produce very much, even if it is fertile, but it is often possible to produce good crops on less fertile soil at lower levels because water usually accumulates there. Even on relatively flat land, agricultural plots should be arranged depending upon the level of the field in relation to the flow of water, or water should be channelized from upper levels to lower levels. Cooperatives will follow such an arrangement.
Land is extremely important in the psychology of farmers because they are very attached to their land. Farmers may give away hundreds of kilos of produce, but they would never voluntarily give away even a few square metres of their land. Suppose many small farmers own a total of 200 acres. If they form a cooperative and keep a record of their shares based on the size of their individual holdings, a sense of ownership is maintained. If all the land is on the same level then the boundaries between the small plots can be broken down, increasing the area of arable land. In such a system the psychology of the farmers will not be affected and they will not feel any insecurity. They will be able to increase the area of land under production by clearing away the boundaries which needlessly divide the land into many individual holdings and by scientifically cultivating infertile land.
Farmers who own only several square metres of land cannot keep bullocks and a plough. They have to give their land to someone who can cultivate it, as in the sharecropping system. If they do give their land to a sharecropper, they rarely get anything in return. This predicament arises because the size of the land is so small. If cultivation is done on a cooperative basis many small plots can be merged into one large plot. This will be of great collective benefit to the farmers.
In India in the time of Akbar a system was in vogue whereby boundaries were constructed around plots of land. Akbar introduced a new system in which the northern and western boundaries of each plot were owned by the owner of that plot. When cooperatives remove boundaries to form larger areas of agricultural land, the land occupied by the northern and western boundaries of each plot should revert to the owner of that plot.
Today for the cultivation of land farmers need things such as fertilizer, a tractor and irrigation water. Animal fertilizers are insufficient – farmers need chemical fertilizers. But wherever chemical fertilizers are used intensively, the land becomes infertile and useless after some time. Chemical fertilizers eventually destroy the vital energy of the land and it becomes lifeless, like cement. Intensive research should be conducted on how to use chemical fertilizers in agriculture without any ill effects on the land.
In the system of individual farming it is not possible to escape the ill effects of chemical fertilizers. However, in the cooperative system there is great scope for agricultural research and development to discover new ways to better utilize and prolong the vitality of land. The benefit of a cooperative is that it combines the wealth and resources of many individuals and harnesses them in a united way.
There was a time when farmers used to leave their land unused for a year after several years of continuous cultivation, but this is not possible today. So it is necessary to adopt a system whereby either chemical fertilizers will be used which will not decrease soil fertility, or high yields will be achieved without using chemical fertilizers at all. I am confident that this will be achieved in the very near future.
Agriculture should have the same status as industry. This policy is not followed in many undeveloped and developing countries today, and can best be implemented through the cooperative system. For example, the apple orchards of Himachal Pradesh should function as cooperatives rather than private farms, and so should the packaging industry for apple transportation and marketing. The processing and packaging of apples should be regarded as part of the farming industry. Those employed in agriculture should get bonuses in the same way as those employed in industry. Thus, farmers or agricultural cooperatives should organize the whole agricultural sector of the economy on the basis of industry.
Farmers Cooperatives
PROUT advocates the reorganization of all agricultural land according to a phase-wise plan. In the first phase all uneconomic landholdings should be taken over by cooperative management for the benefit of both those who previously owned the land and agricultural labourers who work in the cooperative. In the second phase all landowners should be requested to join the cooperative system. In the third phase there should be rational distribution of land and redetermination of ownership. Finally, in the fourth phase there will be no conflict over the ownership of land. People will learn to think for the collective welfare rather than for petty self-interest. This psychic expansion will create a more congenial social environment. However, such a change in the collective psychology will not come overnight, but will occur gradually according to the sentiment of the people. When such a system has been introduced the present conflict among landowners and landless rural workers will no longer exist.
In the initial stage agricultural cooperatives will be formed with the mutual cooperation of groups of farmers. Suppose A, B, C and D are four farmers who have consolidated their land into a cooperative in the following proportions: A two acres, B five acres, C ten acres and D fifteen acres. The profits from the sale of their crops should be shared in proportion to the amount of land each gave to the cooperative, and the service each rendered for the production of these crops. Farmers will receive produce and profits according to the number of their shares in the cooperative and their labour. As the yield of land increases due to the continuous development of improved scientific techniques, farmers can expect increased productivity and greater prosperity.
A record should be kept of the productive capacity of all the land included in the cooperative. Shares should be allocated on the basis of this productivity. For example, if a farmer has thirty acres of land of which fifteen acres are highly productive and fifteen acres are of low productivity, then his or her shares should take into account the differences in productivity. If some landowners do not want to work in an agricultural cooperative their land should still be included in the cooperative. They should also be considered as cooperative members and should get shares based on the size and productivity of their land. Of course, landowners who do not work in the cooperative will not be entitled to wages.
In the cooperative system farmers need not sell their produce immediately after harvesting due to pressure of circumstances. In the individualistic or private enterprise system, most farmers have to sell their produce immediately in order to get sufficient money to survive. But in the cooperative system farmers will enjoy more financial security as the cooperative can advance money to individual farmers and sell the crops at the most favourable time for the best price. That is, the cooperative can determine how much to sell and when to sell in order to get the best profit. Cooperatives will also be able to fix the price of their own produce within certain price limits. Thus, cooperatives will get the profit which is taken by middlemen and profiteers in the individualistic or capitalistic system.
In the present system after the harvest poor farmers have to pay off the loans they took for such things as irrigation, seeds and labour to produce their crops. In addition, they often purchase clothing for their families for the following year. Due to their urgent need for money they are frequently forced to sell their harvest at virtually give away prices. This type of sale under the pressure of circumstances is called a “distress sale”. To protect the farmers from distress sales, the cooperative system is essential. In a cooperative, farmers will keep the necessary quantity of farm produce to meet their food needs for a year and will sell the excess produce to the cooperative at the rate fixed by the cooperative. When the market price is reasonable, the cooperative will sell the produce. The farmers will then receive their percentage of the profit which will be proportional to the amount of their land shareholding in the cooperative.
Taxes, levies, excise duties, etc., should be collectively paid by the cooperative, thus freeing individual farmers from financial pressure and economic exploitation. In many economically developed countries, there are no land taxes because the revenue collected from such taxes is only a very small part of the total revenue.
The workforce in the cooperative system will be composed of the shareholding farmers and non-shareholding labourers. Both groups will benefit: the shareholding farmers will get regular salaries for their work plus a return on their shares, while the labourers will enjoy stable employment and favourable wages.
There are two types of non-shareholding labourers working in agricultural cooperatives – those who are permanent labourers and those who are casual or contract labourers. The permanent labourers will get bonuses as incentives besides their wages, while casual labourers will only get wages for their labour. Those labourers who give the greatest service to the cooperative should get the greatest bonuses. Skilled workers should get paid more than unskilled workers. This will be an incentive for all to become skilled labourers and to work harder. Bonuses should be paid according to the amount of wages which should reflect both the skill and productivity of the labourer.
Members who purchase shares in the cooperative should have no power or right to transfer their shares without the permission of the cooperative, but their shares may be inherited. If some cooperative members have no descendants, then their shares should pass on to their legally authorized successors who will become members of the cooperative if they are not already members. The reason for this policy is that it prevents capitalists from purchasing large numbers of shares in a cooperative and speculating in the market place. This type of economic activity can easily lead to a depression.
In different countries there are different systems of inheritance, so the right of inheritance should be decided according to the system in vogue in a particular country. For example, in Bengal the Dáyabhága system is followed, in other places in India the Hindu Code is the established system, while in other countries other systems are practised. If this arrangement is followed, cooperative members will not need to go to court or get involved in litigation as the zamindars of the past used to do. As all members of the cooperative will be from the same vicinity or members of the same village, they will all know each other, and thus there will be little difficulty in deciding who should be the legally appointed recipient of the shares. The members of the cooperative themselves will be able to decide who can claim the right of inheritance to the shares owned by the deceased members.
Disadvantaged or minor landowners will also benefit in the cooperative system. A widow, a disabled farmer, or a minor boy or girl who owns some land will derive an income from the land based on the number of shares in the cooperative. In the system of private ownership their land would have remained unutilized, and they would have remained poor. Therefore, even if cooperative members are unable to do any work, they will still be entitled to an income from the total profit of the cooperative.
Farmers may also create producers cooperatives to produce items for various industries. Thus, some farmers cooperatives may function as both farmers and producers cooperatives. Raw materials which are of non-farming origin, such as limestone for the production of cement, should be processed by producers cooperatives. Cooperatives which are only agricultural should sell their produce directly to the producers cooperative which in turn can manufacture a variety of consumer goods. Farmers cooperatives which also function as producers cooperatives can increase their profitability in various ways. For example, such cooperatives could produce oil from rice husks. The money earned may be reallocated and reinvested in the farmers-cum-producers cooperative or used for research and development.
Farmers in agricultural cooperatives will be able to exert collective pressure on the local, state or federal governments for different benefits and facilities. For example, in India individual farmers who grow fruit normally use deep well irrigation. But this can adversely affect fruit production because if the water-table drops too far below the roots, the fruit trees will gradually wither and die. In such circumstances shallow tube wells are better, but these wells cannot supply sufficient water for irrigation. Farmers need ponds, barrages and lift and shift irrigation facilities, and for these things they may need government assistance.
It is the cardinal right of the people to be guaranteed the minimum requirements of food, clothing, housing, education and medical treatment. The proper supply of irrigation water is also a cardinal right, because without water, food, which is the most important of the minimum requirements, cannot be produced. Irrigation water is like the apex of a spinning top – without it the top cannot spin.
Producers and Consumers Cooperatives
Besides agricultural or farmers cooperatives, PROUT advocates the formation of other types of cooperatives, including producers and consumers cooperatives. Producers cooperatives include agro-industries, agrico-industries and non-agricultural industries. The total profit of such cooperatives should be distributed among the workers and members of the cooperative according to their individual capital investment in the cooperative and the service they render to the production and management of the cooperative.
Similarly, consumers cooperatives should be formed by like-minded persons who will share the profits of the cooperative according to their individual labour and capital investment. Those who are engaged in the management of such cooperatives will also be entitled to draw salaries on the basis of the services they render to the cooperative. Consumers cooperatives will distribute consumer goods to members of society at reasonable rates.
Commodities can be divided into three categories – essential commodities such as rice, pulse, salt and clothing; demi-essential commodities such as oil and antiseptic soap; and non-essential commodities such as luxury goods. If hoarders create artificial shortages of non-essential commodities common people will not be affected, but if they accumulate essential commodities then common people will suffer tremendously. This situation can be avoided if consumers cooperatives purchase essential commodities directly from producers cooperatives or agricultural cooperatives.
Capitalists hoard essential commodities and create artificial scarcity to extract the maximum profit. As a result consumers pay inflated prices for essential commodities, and sometimes they even find that such goods are not available at all. Middlemen and profiteers create artificial shortages of essential commodities knowing that people will certainly purchase them, even by taking loans, but few people take loans to purchase luxury goods. If the distribution of essential commodities is done through consumers cooperatives, middlemen and profiteers will be eliminated.
Consumer cooperatives should be supplied with commodities from both agricultural and producers cooperatives. Commodities which do not go directly from agricultural cooperatives to consumer cooperatives should be produced by producers cooperatives. In addition, non-farming commodities should be compulsorily produced by producers cooperatives. For example, agricultural or producers cooperatives which produce cotton or silk thread should sell the thread to weavers cooperatives which can produce cloth on their power looms. Hand looms can also be used where intricate design work is required, but generally weavers cooperatives should install the latest power looms. The weavers cooperatives will in turn supply consumers cooperatives.
The number of items considered essential commodities should be continually and progressively revised and expanded with the changes in time, space and person. Such revisions should be made by the government and not by the board of directors of a particular cooperative. What is considered a demi-essential commodity today may be treated as an essential commodity tomorrow. Demi-essential commodities which may be affected by artificial shortages causing suffering to common people, should be produced by producers cooperatives. The production of luxury goods can be left in the hands of the private sector. Essential commodities or services of a non-farming nature coming within the scope of producers cooperatives, and which require huge capital investments, should be managed by the government. The railway system is an example.
So, for the establishment of a healthy society, agricultural cooperatives, essential commodity producers cooperatives and essential commodity consumer cooperatives are a must.
Cooperative Management
Cooperative members should form a board of directors for each cooperative. The board should decide the amount of profit to be divided among the members; that is, the dividend to be paid to each shareholder. However, the total profit should not be distributed in the form of dividends – some should be kept for reinvestment or purchasing items such as tractors, manure, etc.; some should also be used for increasing authorized capital; and some should be deposited in the reserve fund. The reserve fund should be used to increase the value of the dividend in the years when production is low. If this system is followed the authorized capital will not be affected.
The board of directors should be elected from among the cooperative members – their positions should not be honorary. Care should be taken to ensure that not a single immoral person is elected to the board. All directors must be moralists.
To stop black-marketeering strong steps need to be taken by the government. For example, to protect the clothing industry, the government should pass a law which prevents the sale of any clothing without the trademark of the producers cooperative where it is made. Thus, if black-marketeers try to sell any clothing without trademarks, they can be easily caught. This simple but effective remedy is known to many intelligent people, but still they do nothing. This is because they are the agents of capitalists who need money from these black-marketeers and hoarders to fight their election campaigns. This kind of corruption in the electoral system is part of democracy, so we can say that democracy is not the best form of government. Hoarding, profiteering and black-marketeering cannot be stopped in the democratic system because those who try to stop it will be thrown out of power. In the high point of the Kśatriya Era smuggling and hoarding were controlled, but as soon as the influence of the vipras or vaeshyas emerged, the control over these corrupt practices slackened.
Many small satellite cooperatives should be formed to supply various items to large producers cooperatives. Take a car factory, for example. The many different parts for a motor car can be locally manufactured in small cooperatives. The members of these small satellite cooperatives may even carry on their work from their homes, involving all their family members. The main function of large producers cooperatives will be to assemble the different car parts. This will have two benefits: the large cooperative will not require many labourers hence labour unrest will be minimized, and labour costs will be reduced and thus the cost of the commodities will be kept low.
The problem of a floating population and immigrant labour will not occur in the cooperative system, as cooperative members will have to be local people. Floating labourers should have no right to be cooperative members – migratory birds have no place in cooperatives – as they can disturb a whole economy. Howrah district, for example, produces sufficient crops in a season to feed the local people for seventeen months, but due to immigrant labour the produce is consumed in six and a half months. The elimination of the floating population will also protect the social life of the cooperative from the possibility of adverse social influences.
In the cooperative system unemployment will be solved. As production increases the need for more facilities and resources will also increase. Educated people can be employed as skilled workers. There will also be a need for tractor drivers, labourers and cultivators, and cooperative members will naturally do this work. Village people will not need to move to the cities for employment. In the cooperative system there should be no compulsory age for superannuation. People should be free to work as long as they like, providing their health permits.
Those socio-economic units which do not have a sufficient supply of raw materials will have to manufacture synthetic or artificial raw materials. Suppose a unit or region does not have an adequate supply of fodder to feed its cattle or sheep. Will it import fodder from another unit or region? No, it should manufacture artificial fodder instead. Similarly, it takes a substantial volume of cotton to produce one dhoti [the traditional lower garment worn by men in northeastern India]. To transport large amounts of cotton also requires much energy, and so if it is not readily available, synthetic fabric can be produced instead.
As science advances, cooperatives will develop and manufacture a great variety of commodities from synthetic raw materials. In the capitalist system, raw materials are imported from other countries or regions in order to manufacture finished products. Cooperatives will not follow this system. They will develop their own raw materials through research so that they are not dependent on foreign raw materials.
Integrated Progress
Through the cooperative system human society will progress with accelerating speed, ushering in a new revolution in science. No part of the universe will be left unutilized – every nook and corner will be properly used. Where fodder is available, grazing land, dairy farms and milk production can be developed. Where fodder is not available, synthetic milk will be produced. In this way progress and development will be maintained in every field of life.
The day is very near when science will be guided by spiritually oriented intellectuals. When this day comes, science will move forward with leaps and bounds, causing the intellectual capacity of human beings to increase immensely. Cooperatives will greatly assist his psychic and spiritual advancement.
To enhance the unity in society we should encourage all common factors and discourage all fissiparous factors. For example, in India there are many common factors which help create unity, and there are many fissiparous factors which create disunity. The most fundamental point of unity in India is that the Indian mentality is God-centred; that is, it is intrinsically based on theism. It accepts divine providence as a cardinal human factor. Even Indian communists are theists in their hearts, but on a political platform they speak as atheists. Although the spiritual standard of the people is high, the moral standard is lower than in western countries. Thus, the moral standard needs to be increased. Moralists should be created. For this a universal ideology should be propagated in every nook and corner of the country.
Another point of unity in India is the Sanskrit language. The Indian people may or may not know Sanskrit, but they all certainly have a deep love and respect for it. If Sanskrit had become the national language of India instead of Hindi, all the present problems relating to the national language would have been avoided.
Take another example, the calendar system. In North India and some parts of South India the lunar calendar, called Saḿvat, which depends upon the movement of the moon, is followed. In this system the seventh aśárh is in the morning, the eighth aśárh is at noon and the ninth aśárh is at night. A lot of problems arise with such a calendar. In Bengal, Assam, Manipur, the Punjab, Jammu, Kashmir, Orissa and some parts of South India the solar calendar, called Shakábda, which depends upon the movement of the sun, is used. According to this system, in Bengal the first Vaeshákha is on the fourteenth of April and in the Punjab the first Vaeshákha is on the thirteenth of April. Should we encourage this difference in the calendar system? No, so either the Shakábda system or the international calendar system should be followed. So, to integrate the entire human race, unifying factors should be encouraged and fissiparous factors should be discouraged.
The sweetest unifying factors are love and sympathy for humanity. The wants of the human heart are joy, pleasure and beatitude. In the physical realm the best expression of this human sweetness is the cooperative system. The cooperative system is the best representation of the sweet nectar of humanity.
18 February 1988, Calcutta
Proutist Economics [a compilation]
P.R. Sarkar is an Indian Philosopher and spiritual mentor and the founder of Progressive Utilization Theory. He passed away 1990.
As you know, human society is one and indivisible. A human being cannot live alone. If a person wants to drink water from a well, he or she needs a rope and a bucket, and to tie the rope one needs a hook. For all these things, the help of the others is indispensable.
In society human beings have to work jointly with others so that everybody can move forward collectively. Samánam ejati iti samájah. That is, society is the collective movement of a group of individuals who have made a unanimous decision to move towards a common goal. If human beings move closely together in all aspects of life, except for those few aspects which are very personal, the better it will be for the welfare of society. Only those things which cannot be done collectively should be done individually.
So, it is always better for people to work together as far as possible – the more that human beings work together, the better it is. If this principle is not followed the spirit of society will be broken, adversely affecting the very existence of human beings. People have to eat food individually – another person cannot eat your food for you – however a meal can be shared collectively. Where individuality dominates human life, the environment, the welfare of different groups and even the continued existence of humanity may be adversely affected.
Coordinated Cooperation
“Operation” means “to get something done through any medium or media”. Suppose you are operating a tool machine. If this type of operation is done with collective effort then it is called “cooperation”. In the case of cooperation, something is done with equal rights, equal human prestige and equal locus standi.
In every field of collective life there should be cooperation among the members of society. Where this cooperation is between free human beings, each with equal rights and mutual respect for each other, and each working for the welfare of the other, it is called “coordinated cooperation”. Where people do something individually or collectively, but keep themselves under other people’s supervision, then it is called “subordinated cooperation”. In each and every stratum of life, we should do everything with coordinated cooperation and always avoid subordinated cooperation.
In the world today different socio-economic systems are in vogue, but none of these systems are based on coordinated cooperation. Rather, in these systems social relationships are mainly based on subordinated cooperation, resulting in the degeneration of society’s moral fabric. For example, in some countries there is a glaring lack of racial parity and no coordinated cooperation among the different ethnic groups whatsoever. This lack of proper equilibrium and equipoise in social life is causing the whole structure of society to crumble down.
In those countries that follow the commune system there is also lack of coordinated cooperation. In the commune system society is reduced to merely a production-distribution mechanism under a regimented system of control. Rather than increase production, the commune system forces production down. The consequences can be seen in nearly all communist countries: food shortages. Capitalist countries such as Australia, Canada and the USA are selling their food grains to the Soviet Union and China. Moreover, the workers in a commune do not feel oneness with the job, nor do they have the freedom to express all their potentialities. Such a suffocating and mechanical system fosters a materialistic outlook and produces atheistic leadership.
In the commune system there is no personal ownership. Without a sense of personal ownership people do not labour hard or care for any property. If farmers feel they have permanent usufructuary rights to the land they will get a better out-turn. Such a sentiment is suppressed in the commune system, resulting in sluggish production and psychic oppression. Intelligent people are forced to do work which is unsuitable for them and are paid the same wages as ordinary workers. There is no incentive system and individual initiative by meritorious people is not encouraged, so naturally people do not work hard. Such a system can never solve society’s economic problems, either in agriculture or in industry. Rather, it will only aggravate existing problems and create fresh social problems. The production and distribution systems of the commune system are fundamentally defective, exploitative and anti-human.
The commune system is based on subordinated cooperation – the relationships are those of supervisor and supervised or master and servant. Such relationships are detrimental for human progress and retard any possibility of progressive movement. They are ultravires to the wonts of the human mind.
PROUT supports the implementation of the cooperative system because its inner spirit is one of coordinated cooperation. Only the cooperative system can ensure the healthy, integrated progress of humanity, and establish complete and everlasting unity among the human race. People should work to enjoy sweeter fruits by establishing the cooperative system. PROUT raises the slogans: “We want cooperatives, not communes,” and, “We are not slaves of communes.”
Cooperation in Agriculture
If the spirit of cooperation is followed, those commodities which are essential for supplying the minimum requirements such as food, clothing, housing, education and medical treatment will have to be cooperatively produced. Food is the most important commodity, and because of the importance of food, agriculture is the most important sector of the economy. It is generally the case that the staple food of a country is also its main food crop. In Bengal, for example, the main food is rice and so paddy is the main crop. Similarly, the main crop in the Punjab is wheat, in Ireland potato, and in Scotland rye, oats and barley.
For the proper reorganization and maximum utilization of agricultural land, the cooperative system is most preferable. The fertility of the soil depends upon the natural terrain of the countryside, and the size of a harvest depends largely upon the water content of the soil. High land will not generally produce very much, even if it is fertile, but it is often possible to produce good crops on less fertile soil at lower levels because water usually accumulates there. Even on relatively flat land, agricultural plots should be arranged depending upon the level of the field in relation to the flow of water, or water should be channelized from upper levels to lower levels. Cooperatives will follow such an arrangement.
Land is extremely important in the psychology of farmers because they are very attached to their land. Farmers may give away hundreds of kilos of produce, but they would never voluntarily give away even a few square metres of their land. Suppose many small farmers own a total of 200 acres. If they form a cooperative and keep a record of their shares based on the size of their individual holdings, a sense of ownership is maintained. If all the land is on the same level then the boundaries between the small plots can be broken down, increasing the area of arable land. In such a system the psychology of the farmers will not be affected and they will not feel any insecurity. They will be able to increase the area of land under production by clearing away the boundaries which needlessly divide the land into many individual holdings and by scientifically cultivating infertile land.
Farmers who own only several square metres of land cannot keep bullocks and a plough. They have to give their land to someone who can cultivate it, as in the sharecropping system. If they do give their land to a sharecropper, they rarely get anything in return. This predicament arises because the size of the land is so small. If cultivation is done on a cooperative basis many small plots can be merged into one large plot. This will be of great collective benefit to the farmers.
In India in the time of Akbar a system was in vogue whereby boundaries were constructed around plots of land. Akbar introduced a new system in which the northern and western boundaries of each plot were owned by the owner of that plot. When cooperatives remove boundaries to form larger areas of agricultural land, the land occupied by the northern and western boundaries of each plot should revert to the owner of that plot.
Today for the cultivation of land farmers need things such as fertilizer, a tractor and irrigation water. Animal fertilizers are insufficient – farmers need chemical fertilizers. But wherever chemical fertilizers are used intensively, the land becomes infertile and useless after some time. Chemical fertilizers eventually destroy the vital energy of the land and it becomes lifeless, like cement. Intensive research should be conducted on how to use chemical fertilizers in agriculture without any ill effects on the land.
In the system of individual farming it is not possible to escape the ill effects of chemical fertilizers. However, in the cooperative system there is great scope for agricultural research and development to discover new ways to better utilize and prolong the vitality of land. The benefit of a cooperative is that it combines the wealth and resources of many individuals and harnesses them in a united way.
There was a time when farmers used to leave their land unused for a year after several years of continuous cultivation, but this is not possible today. So it is necessary to adopt a system whereby either chemical fertilizers will be used which will not decrease soil fertility, or high yields will be achieved without using chemical fertilizers at all. I am confident that this will be achieved in the very near future.
Agriculture should have the same status as industry. This policy is not followed in many undeveloped and developing countries today, and can best be implemented through the cooperative system. For example, the apple orchards of Himachal Pradesh should function as cooperatives rather than private farms, and so should the packaging industry for apple transportation and marketing. The processing and packaging of apples should be regarded as part of the farming industry. Those employed in agriculture should get bonuses in the same way as those employed in industry. Thus, farmers or agricultural cooperatives should organize the whole agricultural sector of the economy on the basis of industry.
Farmers Cooperatives
PROUT advocates the reorganization of all agricultural land according to a phase-wise plan. In the first phase all uneconomic landholdings should be taken over by cooperative management for the benefit of both those who previously owned the land and agricultural labourers who work in the cooperative. In the second phase all landowners should be requested to join the cooperative system. In the third phase there should be rational distribution of land and redetermination of ownership. Finally, in the fourth phase there will be no conflict over the ownership of land. People will learn to think for the collective welfare rather than for petty self-interest. This psychic expansion will create a more congenial social environment. However, such a change in the collective psychology will not come overnight, but will occur gradually according to the sentiment of the people. When such a system has been introduced the present conflict among landowners and landless rural workers will no longer exist.
In the initial stage agricultural cooperatives will be formed with the mutual cooperation of groups of farmers. Suppose A, B, C and D are four farmers who have consolidated their land into a cooperative in the following proportions: A two acres, B five acres, C ten acres and D fifteen acres. The profits from the sale of their crops should be shared in proportion to the amount of land each gave to the cooperative, and the service each rendered for the production of these crops. Farmers will receive produce and profits according to the number of their shares in the cooperative and their labour. As the yield of land increases due to the continuous development of improved scientific techniques, farmers can expect increased productivity and greater prosperity.
A record should be kept of the productive capacity of all the land included in the cooperative. Shares should be allocated on the basis of this productivity. For example, if a farmer has thirty acres of land of which fifteen acres are highly productive and fifteen acres are of low productivity, then his or her shares should take into account the differences in productivity. If some landowners do not want to work in an agricultural cooperative their land should still be included in the cooperative. They should also be considered as cooperative members and should get shares based on the size and productivity of their land. Of course, landowners who do not work in the cooperative will not be entitled to wages.
In the cooperative system farmers need not sell their produce immediately after harvesting due to pressure of circumstances. In the individualistic or private enterprise system, most farmers have to sell their produce immediately in order to get sufficient money to survive. But in the cooperative system farmers will enjoy more financial security as the cooperative can advance money to individual farmers and sell the crops at the most favourable time for the best price. That is, the cooperative can determine how much to sell and when to sell in order to get the best profit. Cooperatives will also be able to fix the price of their own produce within certain price limits. Thus, cooperatives will get the profit which is taken by middlemen and profiteers in the individualistic or capitalistic system.
In the present system after the harvest poor farmers have to pay off the loans they took for such things as irrigation, seeds and labour to produce their crops. In addition, they often purchase clothing for their families for the following year. Due to their urgent need for money they are frequently forced to sell their harvest at virtually give away prices. This type of sale under the pressure of circumstances is called a “distress sale”. To protect the farmers from distress sales, the cooperative system is essential. In a cooperative, farmers will keep the necessary quantity of farm produce to meet their food needs for a year and will sell the excess produce to the cooperative at the rate fixed by the cooperative. When the market price is reasonable, the cooperative will sell the produce. The farmers will then receive their percentage of the profit which will be proportional to the amount of their land shareholding in the cooperative.
Taxes, levies, excise duties, etc., should be collectively paid by the cooperative, thus freeing individual farmers from financial pressure and economic exploitation. In many economically developed countries, there are no land taxes because the revenue collected from such taxes is only a very small part of the total revenue.
The workforce in the cooperative system will be composed of the shareholding farmers and non-shareholding labourers. Both groups will benefit: the shareholding farmers will get regular salaries for their work plus a return on their shares, while the labourers will enjoy stable employment and favourable wages.
There are two types of non-shareholding labourers working in agricultural cooperatives – those who are permanent labourers and those who are casual or contract labourers. The permanent labourers will get bonuses as incentives besides their wages, while casual labourers will only get wages for their labour. Those labourers who give the greatest service to the cooperative should get the greatest bonuses. Skilled workers should get paid more than unskilled workers. This will be an incentive for all to become skilled labourers and to work harder. Bonuses should be paid according to the amount of wages which should reflect both the skill and productivity of the labourer.
Members who purchase shares in the cooperative should have no power or right to transfer their shares without the permission of the cooperative, but their shares may be inherited. If some cooperative members have no descendants, then their shares should pass on to their legally authorized successors who will become members of the cooperative if they are not already members. The reason for this policy is that it prevents capitalists from purchasing large numbers of shares in a cooperative and speculating in the market place. This type of economic activity can easily lead to a depression.
In different countries there are different systems of inheritance, so the right of inheritance should be decided according to the system in vogue in a particular country. For example, in Bengal the Dáyabhága system is followed, in other places in India the Hindu Code is the established system, while in other countries other systems are practised. If this arrangement is followed, cooperative members will not need to go to court or get involved in litigation as the zamindars of the past used to do. As all members of the cooperative will be from the same vicinity or members of the same village, they will all know each other, and thus there will be little difficulty in deciding who should be the legally appointed recipient of the shares. The members of the cooperative themselves will be able to decide who can claim the right of inheritance to the shares owned by the deceased members.
Disadvantaged or minor landowners will also benefit in the cooperative system. A widow, a disabled farmer, or a minor boy or girl who owns some land will derive an income from the land based on the number of shares in the cooperative. In the system of private ownership their land would have remained unutilized, and they would have remained poor. Therefore, even if cooperative members are unable to do any work, they will still be entitled to an income from the total profit of the cooperative.
Farmers may also create producers cooperatives to produce items for various industries. Thus, some farmers cooperatives may function as both farmers and producers cooperatives. Raw materials which are of non-farming origin, such as limestone for the production of cement, should be processed by producers cooperatives. Cooperatives which are only agricultural should sell their produce directly to the producers cooperative which in turn can manufacture a variety of consumer goods. Farmers cooperatives which also function as producers cooperatives can increase their profitability in various ways. For example, such cooperatives could produce oil from rice husks. The money earned may be reallocated and reinvested in the farmers-cum-producers cooperative or used for research and development.
Farmers in agricultural cooperatives will be able to exert collective pressure on the local, state or federal governments for different benefits and facilities. For example, in India individual farmers who grow fruit normally use deep well irrigation. But this can adversely affect fruit production because if the water-table drops too far below the roots, the fruit trees will gradually wither and die. In such circumstances shallow tube wells are better, but these wells cannot supply sufficient water for irrigation. Farmers need ponds, barrages and lift and shift irrigation facilities, and for these things they may need government assistance.
It is the cardinal right of the people to be guaranteed the minimum requirements of food, clothing, housing, education and medical treatment. The proper supply of irrigation water is also a cardinal right, because without water, food, which is the most important of the minimum requirements, cannot be produced. Irrigation water is like the apex of a spinning top – without it the top cannot spin.
Producers and Consumers Cooperatives
Besides agricultural or farmers cooperatives, PROUT advocates the formation of other types of cooperatives, including producers and consumers cooperatives. Producers cooperatives include agro-industries, agrico-industries and non-agricultural industries. The total profit of such cooperatives should be distributed among the workers and members of the cooperative according to their individual capital investment in the cooperative and the service they render to the production and management of the cooperative.
Similarly, consumers cooperatives should be formed by like-minded persons who will share the profits of the cooperative according to their individual labour and capital investment. Those who are engaged in the management of such cooperatives will also be entitled to draw salaries on the basis of the services they render to the cooperative. Consumers cooperatives will distribute consumer goods to members of society at reasonable rates.
Commodities can be divided into three categories – essential commodities such as rice, pulse, salt and clothing; demi-essential commodities such as oil and antiseptic soap; and non-essential commodities such as luxury goods. If hoarders create artificial shortages of non-essential commodities common people will not be affected, but if they accumulate essential commodities then common people will suffer tremendously. This situation can be avoided if consumers cooperatives purchase essential commodities directly from producers cooperatives or agricultural cooperatives.
Capitalists hoard essential commodities and create artificial scarcity to extract the maximum profit. As a result consumers pay inflated prices for essential commodities, and sometimes they even find that such goods are not available at all. Middlemen and profiteers create artificial shortages of essential commodities knowing that people will certainly purchase them, even by taking loans, but few people take loans to purchase luxury goods. If the distribution of essential commodities is done through consumers cooperatives, middlemen and profiteers will be eliminated.
Consumer cooperatives should be supplied with commodities from both agricultural and producers cooperatives. Commodities which do not go directly from agricultural cooperatives to consumer cooperatives should be produced by producers cooperatives. In addition, non-farming commodities should be compulsorily produced by producers cooperatives. For example, agricultural or producers cooperatives which produce cotton or silk thread should sell the thread to weavers cooperatives which can produce cloth on their power looms. Hand looms can also be used where intricate design work is required, but generally weavers cooperatives should install the latest power looms. The weavers cooperatives will in turn supply consumers cooperatives.
The number of items considered essential commodities should be continually and progressively revised and expanded with the changes in time, space and person. Such revisions should be made by the government and not by the board of directors of a particular cooperative. What is considered a demi-essential commodity today may be treated as an essential commodity tomorrow. Demi-essential commodities which may be affected by artificial shortages causing suffering to common people, should be produced by producers cooperatives. The production of luxury goods can be left in the hands of the private sector. Essential commodities or services of a non-farming nature coming within the scope of producers cooperatives, and which require huge capital investments, should be managed by the government. The railway system is an example.
So, for the establishment of a healthy society, agricultural cooperatives, essential commodity producers cooperatives and essential commodity consumer cooperatives are a must.
Cooperative Management
Cooperative members should form a board of directors for each cooperative. The board should decide the amount of profit to be divided among the members; that is, the dividend to be paid to each shareholder. However, the total profit should not be distributed in the form of dividends – some should be kept for reinvestment or purchasing items such as tractors, manure, etc.; some should also be used for increasing authorized capital; and some should be deposited in the reserve fund. The reserve fund should be used to increase the value of the dividend in the years when production is low. If this system is followed the authorized capital will not be affected.
The board of directors should be elected from among the cooperative members – their positions should not be honorary. Care should be taken to ensure that not a single immoral person is elected to the board. All directors must be moralists.
To stop black-marketeering strong steps need to be taken by the government. For example, to protect the clothing industry, the government should pass a law which prevents the sale of any clothing without the trademark of the producers cooperative where it is made. Thus, if black-marketeers try to sell any clothing without trademarks, they can be easily caught. This simple but effective remedy is known to many intelligent people, but still they do nothing. This is because they are the agents of capitalists who need money from these black-marketeers and hoarders to fight their election campaigns. This kind of corruption in the electoral system is part of democracy, so we can say that democracy is not the best form of government. Hoarding, profiteering and black-marketeering cannot be stopped in the democratic system because those who try to stop it will be thrown out of power. In the high point of the Kśatriya Era smuggling and hoarding were controlled, but as soon as the influence of the vipras or vaeshyas emerged, the control over these corrupt practices slackened.
Many small satellite cooperatives should be formed to supply various items to large producers cooperatives. Take a car factory, for example. The many different parts for a motor car can be locally manufactured in small cooperatives. The members of these small satellite cooperatives may even carry on their work from their homes, involving all their family members. The main function of large producers cooperatives will be to assemble the different car parts. This will have two benefits: the large cooperative will not require many labourers hence labour unrest will be minimized, and labour costs will be reduced and thus the cost of the commodities will be kept low.
The problem of a floating population and immigrant labour will not occur in the cooperative system, as cooperative members will have to be local people. Floating labourers should have no right to be cooperative members – migratory birds have no place in cooperatives – as they can disturb a whole economy. Howrah district, for example, produces sufficient crops in a season to feed the local people for seventeen months, but due to immigrant labour the produce is consumed in six and a half months. The elimination of the floating population will also protect the social life of the cooperative from the possibility of adverse social influences.
In the cooperative system unemployment will be solved. As production increases the need for more facilities and resources will also increase. Educated people can be employed as skilled workers. There will also be a need for tractor drivers, labourers and cultivators, and cooperative members will naturally do this work. Village people will not need to move to the cities for employment. In the cooperative system there should be no compulsory age for superannuation. People should be free to work as long as they like, providing their health permits.
Those socio-economic units which do not have a sufficient supply of raw materials will have to manufacture synthetic or artificial raw materials. Suppose a unit or region does not have an adequate supply of fodder to feed its cattle or sheep. Will it import fodder from another unit or region? No, it should manufacture artificial fodder instead. Similarly, it takes a substantial volume of cotton to produce one dhoti [the traditional lower garment worn by men in northeastern India]. To transport large amounts of cotton also requires much energy, and so if it is not readily available, synthetic fabric can be produced instead.
As science advances, cooperatives will develop and manufacture a great variety of commodities from synthetic raw materials. In the capitalist system, raw materials are imported from other countries or regions in order to manufacture finished products. Cooperatives will not follow this system. They will develop their own raw materials through research so that they are not dependent on foreign raw materials.
Integrated Progress
Through the cooperative system human society will progress with accelerating speed, ushering in a new revolution in science. No part of the universe will be left unutilized – every nook and corner will be properly used. Where fodder is available, grazing land, dairy farms and milk production can be developed. Where fodder is not available, synthetic milk will be produced. In this way progress and development will be maintained in every field of life.
The day is very near when science will be guided by spiritually oriented intellectuals. When this day comes, science will move forward with leaps and bounds, causing the intellectual capacity of human beings to increase immensely. Cooperatives will greatly assist his psychic and spiritual advancement.
To enhance the unity in society we should encourage all common factors and discourage all fissiparous factors. For example, in India there are many common factors which help create unity, and there are many fissiparous factors which create disunity. The most fundamental point of unity in India is that the Indian mentality is God-centred; that is, it is intrinsically based on theism. It accepts divine providence as a cardinal human factor. Even Indian communists are theists in their hearts, but on a political platform they speak as atheists. Although the spiritual standard of the people is high, the moral standard is lower than in western countries. Thus, the moral standard needs to be increased. Moralists should be created. For this a universal ideology should be propagated in every nook and corner of the country.
Another point of unity in India is the Sanskrit language. The Indian people may or may not know Sanskrit, but they all certainly have a deep love and respect for it. If Sanskrit had become the national language of India instead of Hindi, all the present problems relating to the national language would have been avoided.
Take another example, the calendar system. In North India and some parts of South India the lunar calendar, called Saḿvat, which depends upon the movement of the moon, is followed. In this system the seventh aśárh is in the morning, the eighth aśárh is at noon and the ninth aśárh is at night. A lot of problems arise with such a calendar. In Bengal, Assam, Manipur, the Punjab, Jammu, Kashmir, Orissa and some parts of South India the solar calendar, called Shakábda, which depends upon the movement of the sun, is used. According to this system, in Bengal the first Vaeshákha is on the fourteenth of April and in the Punjab the first Vaeshákha is on the thirteenth of April. Should we encourage this difference in the calendar system? No, so either the Shakábda system or the international calendar system should be followed. So, to integrate the entire human race, unifying factors should be encouraged and fissiparous factors should be discouraged.
The sweetest unifying factors are love and sympathy for humanity. The wants of the human heart are joy, pleasure and beatitude. In the physical realm the best expression of this human sweetness is the cooperative system. The cooperative system is the best representation of the sweet nectar of humanity.
18 February 1988, Calcutta
Proutist Economics [a compilation]
P.R. Sarkar is an Indian Philosopher and spiritual mentor and the founder of Progressive Utilization Theory. He passed away 1990.
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