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A Matter of Reality

Audience

There is a lot going on around the world. But I want to talk to each one of you about this life, about this time that we have. It's not often that somebody points out the importance of life itself. We live in a world that sees it very differently.

I'll give you an example. Today, I wanted to know about the latest hurricane. So I turned on the TV. They were talking about how many people might get hurt, how many millions of dollars in damages the last hurricane had caused, and how much damage this one could do. 

Then, all of a sudden, there was an advertisement saying, "Are you overweight? Would you like to lose five to ten pounds? Then this medicine is for you!" And I'm thinking, "Wait a minute. Half of the United States is in trouble, and we're talking about being five to ten pounds overweight?" That's the world we live in. What reality is and what it is not has become an incredibly fine line. So fine, in fact, that it is almost indistinguishable.

Prem Rawat

A long time ago, someone said, "As far as your eyes can see, you can consider it to be an illusion." In our little world, we have made compartments for everything. So when we hear a deep statement like this, we don't really want to act on it. If we did, the consequences would be amazing. You'd come out of your garage and realize, "My house is an illusion." You'd look at your wife and say, "You're an illusion, honey." You'd look at your kids and your car in the same way. I mean, it would be almost paralyzing. You'd wonder, "Wait a minute—as far as the eye can see, it is all an illusion?"

So, we have compartments, and we say, "Well, this is one of those deep thoughts." And then we move along. We go on our way because we don't really want to change. If it means saying, "Oh, I love changes," and not having to change, we say that, too. And people actually make these declarations, "I love changes." As long as nobody causes them to change, it's okay.

I ask people, "Do you have peace in your life?" "Yes." "Really?" "Oh, yes, yes. I read scriptures, I go jogging every day, I do yoga. I have peace. Now, where is the ice cream?" And that's it.

Why am I talking to you about illusion and reality? Does it matter that all this is an illusion? Does it matter that there is a reality? Yes, it does. Why? Because I see myself in relation to all the things that I am surrounded by. If I didn't see any relationship between those things and me, then it wouldn't be a problem. But when I see that relationship, I am caught.

Audience

The point is that all we consider to be real is not. We have our relatives or "relations" and all the people we love. There will be a time when all these relationships will come to an end. There will be a time when they can no longer reciprocate our love. So, why am I talking to you about this? My point is, if you're going to have a relationship, have a relationship with something inside of you, too. If you're going to have loved ones, find the love that is inside of you as well, because this is the one that transcends the limitations of this world.

I hope you understand what I'm trying to say. When you go to somebody's house for dinner, what do you carry away with you? Well, you still have food in your stomach, but you also carry the memory of the enjoyment you had. Learn how to truly enjoy, because when you know how to enjoy, you take that with you in a heart that is full.

Wherever you go, whatever you do, whatever situation you go through, you carry a joy with you. But if you have not understood and included your true self in this life of yours then, yes, you live in a world of illusion. Somehow, you think that this will all be here forever. But it won't.

There is something real in you. There is something beautiful in you. If you want to be mesmerized by beauty, be mesmerized by the beauty that is within you. If you want to understand something, understand yourself. If you want to love, love this beautiful breath that comes into you. If you do this, you will be given a gift of peace, joy, love—not in thoughts, not in words, but in feeling. And that is no ordinary gift.

Prem Rawat

Prem Rawat

in Maharaji: Life, Maharaji: Peace Permalink

The Company You Keep

Audience

A fifteenth century Indian saint used to talk about how all the trees that grow around a sandalwood tree begin to smell like sandalwood. They aren't sandalwood, but as they grow, they take on that beautiful scent.

So is it possible that if I keep the company of the most beautiful thing in my life, I will begin to take on its characteristics? Yes. That's the significance of the analogy.

If keep the company of ignorance, I will take on the characteristics of ignorance, but if I keep the company of clarity, I will begin to take on the qualities of clarity. If I want to have the beautiful aroma of understanding, I need to keep the company of understanding.

If this is even remotely possible, what a possibility exists for me in my life!

Kabir, another fifteenth century saint, says, "We are like cloth that is washed with the soap of clarity again and again until it sparkles. You need to sparkle, to shine, because that is your potential." You are not sandalwood, and you won't become sandalwood. But can you take on some of the beautiful, beautiful aroma of sandalwood? Yes. Therein lies your hope.

Prem Rawat

I hear from people around the world. Many are in difficult situations. Some are in prison, some with life sentences. My message goes to them, and it's an incredible dynamic, because what hope can they have? Even in that situation where there is so little hope, they are looking for hope. They are looking for joy. They are looking for clarity!

We become busy doing so many things that we think are important. But listen to the human being that you are. What is your truest need? Your truest need is to be content.

We go along the highway of life saying, "I need this, I need this, I need this." Some of it is what we think, and some of it comes from other people telling us, "This is what you need this is what you need, this is what you need."

I have heard people rave about Krispy Kreme donuts. I hear that the bakeries have a light that goes on when the donuts are fresh out of the oven and that people actually slow down as they pass by the shop in case the light will go on. And if it does, no matter what they are doing, people will stop to get a donut and satisfy that desire for something delicious.

Audience

It's tempting. Sometimes the thought comes to me, "Hmm, maybe I should try a Krispy Kreme donut." Then I realize, "I don't want to." Does it matter? No.

But everything in this journey of life does matter: what is mine and what is not mine; what I know and what I believe; my thirst and the thirst that has been superimposed upon me. This is a big subject. The way we talk, the way we think, the way we imagine things is directly influenced by the society around us, not us.

What is our true thirst? Who are you? Are you just a puppet, built with the papier-mâché of concepts—one layer of paper over another and another? Or are you something more than that? Pray that the answer is "Yes," because if the answer is "No," we're in trouble.

The good news is that we each have a thirst. We each have a quest to be fulfilled, to be in peace. You may not be aware of it, but deep down you know about it.

Keep the right company, and you will soak in their traits. Keep the company of light, and you will begin to glow. This is the transformation of a human being becoming a true "be-ing." Simple, conscious of existence.

There is a beauty within you that you can be in touch with for the rest of your life. It's ageless. Timeless. Beautiful. Simple. There aren't too many things like that in this world.

If you want to keep the company of that, I can help.

Prem Rawat

Audience
Audience

in Maharaji: Life, Maharaji: Peace Permalink

Keep What Is Yours

Audience

I have been traveling with the message of hope for people—that you exist, that you're alive, that you've been given something that is so precious. I tell people that what they have—not what they need to achieve, not what they need to create, not their need to climb a mountain or swim an ocean—but what they have is the most beautiful thing.

For most people, the hardest thing to understand is that they already have everything they could possibly want. On one hand, there are desires, expectations, aspirations. We are told, "Do this, do this, do this." Remember when you were young and your mother or father would tell you, "Study! Study hard so that one day you can become something"?

I understand the intent behind that statement. The intent is that parents want their children to succeed. But it also implies something else, which is: you are nothing. And that is simply not true.

I don't really want to tell you that your mother was wrong. I want to be able to say that your mother was right. And maybe she was right about everything, except for that one thing—you are something. Not only that, but you are, in fact, something divine. And so, my message brings hope—not just making something up to give you good news, but real hope.

Prem Rawat

What is the reality? The reality is that within you the blessing of breath is coming and going. What does that mean to you? You judge yourself by what you have accomplished. You judge yourself by what you think your world is. Everybody is proud of something. There are mothers and fathers who are proud of their sons and daughters, children who are proud of their parents—and it goes on and on. Everybody's proud of something.

But go beyond the expectations. Right now your bucket is full of ideas. It's your bucket, but it's full of ideas. And these ideas are not yours. It's your bucket, so if it's full of ideas, at least they should be your ideas, right? But that's not how it is. It's full of other people's ideas.

We buy into the idea, "That's how it is." In this life, it's important to put in your bucket only that which is tried and true—and good enough to bear your stamp. Only what you want to put in, not what somebody else wants to put in.

You think this only happened when you were young? No, it happens every day. You walk around with that bucket and people keep chucking things in it, keep chucking things in it—every day. That's why this bucket is full of nothing—nothing that will help you.

Audience

What am I saying? Just walk this life on your feet, not somebody else's. Understand its value for yourself, not because somebody else said this life is valuable.

What is really yours?  I'm only pointing this out because I think you should take care of it. What is really yours? This breath that just came, is really, really yours. It didn't go into someone else. It came just for you. From the workings of the universe, something stirred, and this breath came exclusively for you. That's yours.

So, are you going to keep what's yours? Or only keep what's borrowed? People who keep borrowed things end up without anything. Because it was all borrowed, one day it will be taken away. Those who keep what is truly theirs will be rich beyond belief. Keep it. It brings with it life. Live it. It brings with it joy. Grab it. Fill yourself with that joy. It brings with it hope. Squeeze out all of it. This is for you, and you get to keep it.

Prem Rawat

Prem Rawat
Audience

in Maharaji: Life, Maharaji: Peace Permalink

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