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	<title>Learn Vedic Meditation with Thom Knoles</title>

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		<title>Guru Dakshina and The Dynamics of Worthy Enquiry</title>

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		<pubDate>Fri, 28 May 2010 20:22:29 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Meditation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Money]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Teacher-student relationship]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Dear Meditators,
I had wanted to write an essay to elucidate a subject that otherwise could be awkward and thorny. Its writing was triggered by a student, bless her heart, who cornered me after a meditators’ knowledge meeting. In addition to describing her financial challenges to meet our course fee to attend a retreat, she felt [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: normal;"><em>Dear Meditators,</em></span></p>
<p><em>I had wanted to write an essay to elucidate a subject that otherwise could be awkward and thorny. Its writing was triggered by a student, bless her heart, who cornered me after a meditators’ knowledge meeting. In addition to describing her financial challenges to meet our course fee to attend a retreat, she felt that, “anyway, it is wrong to charge money for spiritual knowledge”. You’ve all met this issue in different guises; perhaps this question has come up for you, personally.</em></p>
<p><em>Of course, one might know the practical explanation: “How do you expect to have expert full-time instructors if you don’t meet their costs?” etc.</em></p>
<p><em>Certainly it is true that teachers of Vedic meditation have costs of living and families, just as do other dedicated professionals, but there is more to our course fees than that. It is also true that we Initiators have a world plan to spread Vedic meditation and enlightenment to all who would like to learn it, and that effort costs money, so we ask that beneficiaries of meditation to contribute to that. But this, too, is not a complete picture of why we ask for a fee.</em></p>
<p><em>Even if a Vedic meditation teacher is personally well off and had no costs to meet, our tradition does not permit us to teach without requiring payment of a meaningful fee.</em></p>
<p><em>Why?</em></p>
<p><em>Amongst all the things a Guru teaches, one is: how to design the experiences you wish to have; how to employ the principle of reciprocity. How to offer, willingly, something precious to you in order to receive something that you will value even more.</em></p>
<div><em>Guru Dakshina (the Guru’s fee), as I define it below, involves an exchange of energy and information that triggers transformation in the consciousness field. It is the principle of initiating a ceremony in which you cause the flow of knowledge and heap benefit on yourself, by demonstrating to yourself and to the Guru what your intention is.</em></div>
<p><em>
<p>The following essay explains something of this tradition. After you read it, please let me have your comments.</p>
<p></em></p>
<div><em>Love and Jai Guru Deva,</em></div>
<p><em>Thom</em></p>
<p><span style="font-size: x-large;"><span><strong><span style="font-size: small;"><span><br />
</span></span></strong></span></span></p>
<p>For millennia in the Vedic tradition it has been a fundamental principle that transformational knowledge, wisdom, should be imparted to a seeker only when ideal initial conditions prevail.  The knowledge of the Guru (literally, “darkness remover”) can become wisdom to a seeker, but only to the extent that the seeker’s conscious receptivity has been opened sufficiently.  Without openness, a seeker may become beguiled by the power that is implicit in knowledge and merely extract select fragments of the teacher’s wisdom. Fragmented knowledge is not wisdom; as Alexander Pope wrote,  “A little learning is a dangerous thing&#8230;”   To make a student rich with deep wisdom, it is the Guru’s responsibility to teach only when someone is qualified to learn.  In the Vedic tradition, a seeker’s conscious receptivity is correlated faithfully with a quality known as “worthy enquiry”.  This is the grade of enquiry that demonstrates the student’s deserving power and openness to learning.</p>
<p>Worthy enquiry conveys a would-be student’s willingness to defer to the teacher’s prerequisites and instructions.  When worthy enquiry is present in the student, the flow of knowledge from the Guru can become complete and unfettered, without the concern of fragmentation.   One way a student demonstrates worthy enquiry is by his willingness to offer Guru Dakshina, that is, the exchange of energy and information between student and teacher that triggers transformation in the consciousness field.  Guru Dakshina most frequently refers to a fee or a service that is called for by the Guru; it is the means to enliven reciprocity.</p>
<p>The willingness of a student to offer support to the Guru certainly is a crucial indicator of worthy enquiry. But beyond this, the offering of Guru Dakshina opens the student’s heart and mind to the field of all possibilities, making room for new knowledge to flow in.</p>
<p>A Vedic master, a Guru, has mastered the capacity to win the support of all the laws of nature and, therefore, always will be provided for amply. Self-sufficiency is a hallmark of enlightenment.   In our tradition, it is considered to confer a great blessing -and it is an honour- when our offerings become one of the means whereby nature provides for the Guru.   Usually, the Guru calls for a monetary course fee before any teaching commences.  In part, this is because in a materialistic society, meaningful offerings are assessed in monetary terms.  The greater the resistance to parting with money, the more powerful is a monetary offering.</p>
<p>To surrender money and time as an offering of Guru Dakshina has a powerful effect on the student; amongst other things, it makes the student really pay attention to what is being taught.</p>
<p>In addition, students are asked to demonstrate worthy enquiry by complying with a daily practice, attending set meetings, and by showing respect through listening to the Guru’s discourses and evincing observance of the Guru’s rules and guidelines.   Our experience as Vedic masters is that most students do not dispute or cast aspersions on value. They willingly embrace the conditions set by the Guru for learning. These students report the largest impact of the teaching most quickly.﻿</p>
<p>If one hesitates to offer or haggles over Guru Dakshina –if one cannot let go- then perhaps one considers money’s outer material buying power to be more valuable than awakening the infinite organizing power of the inner Self. Or perhaps, simply, one considers their money’s value to be greater than the Guru’s knowledge.</p>
<div id="_mcePaste">
<p>To a master, any of these implied attitudes would be a warning sign of a lack of worthy enquiry; teaching someone under unworthy conditions could cause the teaching to become lost to future generations.</p>
<p>Therefore, for our own benefit, and for the benefit of all, it is good to do our utmost to meet all the conditions set by a Guru. To do so clarifies our own intention; demonstrating our worthy enquiry stimulates the unmitigated flow of knowledge, and it brings support to oneself and to the Guru’s plan to offer enlightenment to the world.</p>
<p>JAI GURU DEVA﻿</p>
</div>
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		<title>Initiator Training in India, 2011</title>

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		<pubDate>Wed, 05 May 2010 01:15:54 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[India]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Initiator Training (IT) 2011 is going to be incredible.  The 108-day course will take place entirely in India.  As a participant in the course, you will experience the full depth and breadth of Vedic knowledge and culture.  If you graduate, you will become a teacher in the Tradition of Masters of Vedic Meditation.
Every generation gives [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Initiator Training (IT) 2011 is going to be incredible.  The 108-day course will take place entirely in India.  As a participant in the course, you will experience the full depth and breadth of Vedic knowledge and culture.  If you graduate, you will become a teacher in the Tradition of Masters of Vedic Meditation.</p>
<p>Every generation gives rise to great people whose contribution to the world’s collective knowledge survives the test of time.  Our own Tradition of Masters, from which we have Vedic Meditation, has maintained an effective technique that has outlived the world’s oldest civilisations.  The simple method we teach meditators to practise daily demonstrates its subtle power for positive transformation in myriad benefits; but it is humbling to consider what it took the teachers of this practise to maintain that purity generation after generation, for more than 5,000 years.  The continued relevance of this pure teaching today is the master-work of the Vedic Tradition.  This is the gift for which meditators say “Jai Guru Deva”- Glory to the Tradition of Masters.  As an Initiator, you will be an heir and trustee of this great Tradition of Masters.</p>
<p>The 2011 IT course will offer expanded learning experiences; a program more deeply traditional than was possible before.  The course will begin in Rishikesh on February 5<sup>th</sup>.  On the first day, a Vaidya (Ayurvedic doctor) will consult with each participant to arrive at an understanding of  his or her body/mind nature. This will help each Initiator candidate maintain balance and give you a personalized regimen of Meditation, Siddhis, Ayurvedic food and Yoga-Asanas.  You will learn Sanskrit and experience absorption in Vedic sounds, listening to live chanting from Sama-Veda and Rk Veda experts.</p>
<p>At the beginning of the summer monsoon season, as we commence going deeper and longer into our meditation practice, the entire course will make a pilgrimage higher into the Himalayas, to the specialised venue where graduation will complete by May 24th.</p>
<p>Initiator Training 2011 will be a transformative experience from which perfect balance in body and mind will be achievable.</p>
<p>If you aspire to commence training, then it&#8217;s important that you apply to take the course as soon as possible.   Due to the personal nature of this course, the earlier we can process applications and acceptances, the better we can plan the trip.  Applying to take this course in no way obligates you to commence or pay for the training.</p>
<p>We will be posting course fees shortly and there will be attractive discounts for early payment.</p>
<p>Alternatively, a financing program will be in place that should make it possible for any approved applicant to take the course.  Please go to  <a href="http://www.thomknoles.com/it">www.thomknoles.com/it</a>.  Click through to the online application form <a href="../itform/">http://thomknoles.com/itform/</a> to register for the course.</p>
<p>Love and Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom</p>
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		<title>Death and Grieving the Loss of Loved Ones</title>

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		<pubDate>Sun, 04 Apr 2010 15:08:14 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Death]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fear]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I often get very thoughtful questions from meditators that  represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing  that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, along with my  answers to these questions, might be beneficial to many of you.   I therefore like to share these exchanges with our [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>I often get very thoughtful questions from meditators that  represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing  that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, along with my  answers to these questions, might be beneficial to many of you.   I therefore like to share these exchanges with our community from time  to time.  I hope you get something from the following exchange.</strong></p>
<p><strong>This particular question came from one of our Initiators.<br />
</strong></p>
<p><strong> – Thom</strong></p>
<p>Dear Thom,</p>
<p>Several people around our community have lost loved ones recently.  Today I found myself telling the group at the knowledge meeting:</p>
<p>“Everyone in this room is going to die; and the rest of us are going to watch as one by one we leave, and we will experience the feelings of loss that those leavings bring.  The longer we stay, the more loss we’ll have to experience.  And one of us is going to be the last one standing, will have borne the loss of every other one leaving, and we’re going to call that one the lucky one.”</p>
<p>Could you give me your thoughts on how to address this with our meditators?</p>
<p><strong>My response:</strong></p>
<p>Let us incite some contrast; what of the experiences of loss had by our ancestors in times of world war or during the great ice ages?  Is today’s American urban youth-to-middle-age death-rate really so extreme that it beggars belief?  Do we fail to see ignorance as the most common cause of early death?</p>
<p>We have become a fainthearted generation of shallow thinkers who first dread the obvious, then rail at its being so self-evident, and then fulminate against its being incontrovertible.  This simply is the world that we have to change.</p>
<p>Yes, it is true that the death rate is 100%, and thank God for that, for its being impossible to stop.  Imagine the difficulties we all would have if our fathers, mothers, grandfathers and grandmothers, great grandfathers, great grandmothers and great great great great grandparents, and so on, all continued to live today, dining and sleeping in their families’ homes.</p>
<p>Imagine if Genghis Khan were still alive, and Attila and Alexander and Adolf;  if Jesus of Nazareth were still alive, along with Siddhartha Gautama Sakya.  Imagine if, amongst these stellar opposites, all the billions of forgotten souls had kept their old stressed bodies, too!</p>
<p>No one would inherit anything, no space would be available for anyone not already here.  And the dead-wood factor on this Earth would consist of tens of billions of humans whose bodies’ relevance had expired.  But how many would <em>volunteer</em> to “die” if “death” continued to be avoidable simply by choosing?  Earth shudders at the very concept of our having choice, but laughs as she continues to recycle every last body.</p>
<p>“Death” &#8211;as commonly it is conceived&#8211; is utterly unreal.  “Death” is birth; it is evolution itself.  The common conception of the word, “death”, has reality only for those who do not understand the experience being had by the one who supposedly “died”.  Since the “dead” one did not experience “death” [see below], then for whom else is “death” real?  For whom, over what experience, do we grieve?  This rhetorical question is answered in this selected snapshot from a response that I wrote last week to someone examining the “horror” of the “death” of a loved one.</p>
<hr size="3" />From a letter I wrote in August 2009:<br />
‘&#8230;<em>of course, it is human to grieve, notwithstanding that in the final analysis we are grieving for our own failure to grasp what happened, somewhat wallowing in our pain as [hopefully] we try to adapt to new ways of locating our loved one, the one who no longer is locatable in the old body with which we had become so familiar. That was the body that held the soul for which yet so many unfulfilled plans existed; the plans still remaining as unrealised as they were while that body breathed.</em></p>
<p><em>The degree of pain while grieving is in proportion to one’s attempt to control or to negate the irrevocable change that has occurred.  Grief reactions range from absolute dismissal of the “dead” [existential numbness] to, at the extreme opposite pole, attempting to get the “dead” to continue to relate to one <span style="text-decoration: underline;">on one’s own terms</span> by badgering their newly-liberated consciousness with our non-acceptance, by petitioning them [or someone in power] to restore the former experience, or by wanting to establish with the “dead” <span style="text-decoration: underline;">shared</span> resentment-of-loss; to reverse the irreversible change.</em></p>
<p><em>Meanwhile, the subject of our pain, our loved one, did not experience &#8211; is not experienc<span style="text-decoration: underline;">ing</span>- “death”; he experienced “birth” into a whole new state of consciousness that is so fascinating [and so subtly familiar] that the body left behind becomes entirely forgettable.  Reports of so-called “near” death experiences (&#8211;actually they are experiences of body-death, not “near”&#8211;)  verify and validate that “dying” involves a consciousness transition into a new and fascinating state.  However, when grieving, we do not actually care about that &#8211; rather pathetically, we care only about what <span style="text-decoration: underline;">we</span> are experiencing, not actually what the “dead” one is experiencing.</em></p>
<p><em>Here is what we must face:<br />
Do we really believe that “death” means “cessation of experience”, or “extinction of consciousness”?<br />
If so, a whole new lecture on consciousness must begin here [watch this space].  If not, then we need not ask “<span style="text-decoration: underline;">who</span> dies?”, but rather, “<span style="text-decoration: underline;">what</span> dies?”</em></p>
<p><em>“Death” has reality only as a word to describe the experience of loss of control of whomever didn’t “die”.  In grieving “death” we should be trying to learn new ways of understanding the experience of our loved one. </em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p><em>Unfortunately, the word “death” is used to explain what happened to cause the emotional pain of the one left behind.  Perhaps the one left behind “gave up” on gaining any coherent understanding of “death” at all.  The griever’s pain is attributed to the disappearance of and the loss of shared experience with the loved one.</em></p>
<p><em>The word “death” cannot describe a shared experience with the “dead”.  Likewise, grieving is not an experience that is shared by the “dead”.  One’s remaining bitter or sad [about losing a previous method of relating to a loved one] is not an experience shared by the one who “died”.<br />
The fact is, the griever is sad or bitter about their own loss of their loved one’s location; at the loss of shared experience through familiar means.  Since grief  is not a shared experience, it does not strengthen one’s relationship with the “dead” person’s consciousness.  At best, the process of grieving allows for pain-expression;  it provides for the venting of one’s loss of control of a shared-experience era of a relationship.</em></p>
<p><em>An entirely separate spectre may raise its head for the more illuminated: inexplicably, when a loved one “dies”, one may feel non-attached equanimity, while the ‘mistaken intellect’, demanding conformity with social expectation, insists upon one grieving.  Then one may feel guilt for not grieving!</em></p>
<p><em>Ultimately, knowledge [experience + understanding] eliminates undue bondage to any of these incomplete interpretations.</em></p>
<p><em> </em></p>
<p>Love and Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom</p>
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		<title>Averting World Disasters</title>

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		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Feb 2010 04:05:49 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Meditation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[World Events]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I often get very thoughtful questions from meditators that represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, and my answers to these questions might be beneficial to many of you.  I therefore like to share these exchanges with our community from time to time.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>I often get very thoughtful questions from meditators that represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, and my answers to these questions might be beneficial to many of you.  I therefore like to share these exchanges with our community from time to time.  I hope you get something from the following exchange.</strong></p>
<p><strong> &#8211; Thom</strong></p>
<p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"> </span></p>
<p><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Question:</span></em></strong><em> </em><em>How can there be any intelligence in the laws of nature when hundreds of thousands of innocent people suffer and die from an earthquake, as is happening in Haiti?<br />
What thoughts go through your mind, Thom, when you hear of such an event?<br />
How does meditating help a suffering world?<br />
Aren’t we just turning a blind eye when we meditate?<br />
</em><br />
<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Thom:</span></strong><br />
Every single day, much of our world’s vast population experiences appalling suffering of every kind; most of it is unimaginable to us.  The deaths, the gruesome suffering, the starvation and thirst after the earthquake in Haiti is well-covered by the media; it is shocking to learn of these horrors, and it is extremely frustrating to witness the obstacles to bringing meaningful help after-the-fact.</p>
<p>This notwithstanding, the media has not documented the hundreds of millions of people worldwide who suffer horribly in myriad ways every minute that we sleep, wake, and eat.</p>
<p>When given no alternative, occasionally the media will pause its program of reporting upon trivia and the “rich-people-problems of the non-entities” (by the latter term I mean ‘persons of little consequence or significance’).  Then the media will present us with a few days’ snapshots of one horrible set of events in one place outside the bubble of safety from which we view &#8211;and it is shocking to us.  Remember: we see only a snapshot before the trivia reports recommence.  What else is happening to our fellow humans while we gorge ourselves on trivia?  The experiences of the rest of our world’s people will go unreported.</p>
<p>Because no one knows what to do about the suffering of the world, unfortunately, the response of the majority of people in developed nations is merely to continue to ignore it. The media simply reflects its constituents’ willingness to ignore.  This collective reaction is unsustainable; it invites destruction.</p>
<p>The true problem in our suffering world is the chronic failure of people in developed nations to correct their priorities.  A developed nation that is fascinated by trivia and willing to ignore is, in fact, engineering its own demise.  Stress accumulation and obsolete education are twin causes of developed nations’ ignorance of the true needs of their fellow humans.  Stress makes one ignorant by causing chronic brain failure collectively.</p>
<p>Haiti was a disaster waiting to happen.  An earthquake triggered that disaster, but humans inside and outside of Haiti set up the initial conditions for the magnitude of the catastrophe.  Far from its being unlikely, only the most likely outcomes eventuated in Haiti, caused by humans failing to foresee the obvious future-in-the-making.  After the disaster hit, we moved to provide aid provoked more by conscience than by other motives.  To do so is a laudable act of charity, but it is not enough.</p>
<p>Consider this: how many more major disasters are waiting to happen right now in our world?  I suggest to you that these are too numerous to catalogue.  Can we deal with another ten or another fifty if they all happen together?  Of course we cannot.</p>
<p>The use of available human brain power has bottomed-out in our generation, averaging just 2%.  Let me congratulate you for practising your meditation technique regularly; you have joined a growing cadre of people who can see the reality of the world around them, because, like them, you are no longer averaging a mere 2% use of your available brainpower.</p>
<p>We cannot help the world by conforming with the majority who use only 2% of their brains.  We must continue to develop our fullest potential in order to make a significant difference.   I invite you and your friends to help me realise the plan of bringing a new age to this suffering world by popularising meditation and thereby decreasing ignorance.</p>
<p>After practising a session of meditation, dynamic activity stabilises the deep inner silence (Being) that we locate within.  Once Being is stabilised, 100% of the brain’s organising power is unleashed.  Regular twice daily meditation allows your entire brain to be fit and available fully for the big, important and urgent projects in the world that deserve high-quality attention, in order to achieve “what should have been done” before disasters underscore it.</p>
<p>Now, as regards nature’s intelligence, if one were to watch impassively as a child crawled excitedly toward a glowing ember and is burned, does this sequence of events negate the existence of intelligence in the laws of nature? Perhaps it does, for those who use 2% of their brains.  You are not one of those.</p>
<p>What I teach is that ignorance creates the weakness that attracts destruction.  A suffering population is a symptom of a world that is ignorant and weak; the suffering population is not blameworthy.  Blame lies with those who do nothing new and thereby enable the world’s capability to ignore its fellow humans.</p>
<p>Don’t wait for others, especially don’t wait for governments.  Identify and address now what is being ignored.  Take that brilliant meditator’s brain of yours and put it into action!</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom</p>
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		<title>The Benefits of Advanced Techniques</title>

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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Dec 2009 21:57:54 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Meditation]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[In Vedic Meditation, an Advanced Technique is designed to take one’s awareness to that stratum, that layer of consciousness, that comprises the interface between thinking and pure silent consciousness.  
During meditation, sometimes we experience a state where the mind is virtually in the “no mantra, no thought” condition, and yet we are experiencing something that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In Vedic Meditation, an Advanced Technique is designed to take one’s awareness to that stratum, that layer of consciousness, that comprises the interface between thinking and pure silent consciousness.  </p>
<p>During meditation, sometimes we experience a state where the mind is virtually in the “no mantra, no thought” condition, and yet we are experiencing something that is so fulfilling – we may not be able to pinpoint what exactly it is — but nonetheless it is something — it is not the Absolute, not the pure silent awareness of transcendence.  Instead, there is some faint thinking there, extremely subtle, but there nonetheless.</p>
<p>The point here is that there is a layer in meditation in which our mind can think and also can <strong>Be</strong> simultaneously.  (Here, <strong>Being</strong> is the innocent silent witness to thinking).  That condition has a Sanskrit name: “<strong>Ritam Bhara Pragya</strong>”, also known simply as Ritam<strong>.</strong>  Ritam is expressive of ‘whole truth’.  So Ritam is ‘the state of consciousness that contains the whole truth’.</p>
<p>What do we mean by whole truth?  It is not the whole truth that our true nature is limited to our body, this individualised mortal set of physiological functions with a history (when it was born, where it has been, what experiences it witnessed, etcetera).  Nor is it the whole truth that (after meditation has revealed the Absolute state of Being) our reality solely is that immortal unboundedness of Being, the unmanifest source of everything.  </p>
<p>The whole truth, the Ritam, is that one is both these realities simultaneously; we are relative and Absolute at the same time.  There is a place in our consciousness, a level, a stratum, deep in the least excited state in meditation where Ritam can be experienced; and it is right on the cusp of transcendence, in the super-subtle field where thinking and other cognitive phenomena are adjacent to Being, just emerging from Being.</p>
<p>With  our “First Initiation” technique, the mind glimpses occasionally this in-between Ritam state, but the First Initiation technique is designed to cause the mind to jump into pure transcendence (the state of “no mantra, no thought”) quickly and to bounce back into the grosser fields of thinking as the body releases its stress.</p>
<p>An Advanced Technique is designed to take the awareness into Ritam (the in-between state) and to linger there; to familiarise the mind with Ritam.</p>
<p>When the mind becomes familiar with Ritam, the subtle perceptual capability of the senses is very engaged; the state of Ritam is absorbing and the senses become enchanted by their experience &#8211; something akin to experiencing nectar.  Simply the phenomenon &#8211; the mere process of experiencing &#8211; intrinsically is fascinating to the senses.  </p>
<p>So, this fascination (experienced in Ritam, during meditation) gives the senses a naturally refined liking for and a capacity for discernment of the subtle.  The senses develop an habituation to find that super-subtle layer outside meditation, in the eyes-open state.  The regular daily experiences of that super-subtle value in Ritam hones the senses to a razor-sharpness, giving them acuity &#8211; an acuteness &#8211; of sensory perception with eyes open, whilst engaged in activity.</p>
<p>Now, outside of meditation (with eyes open) the senses will delve into their objects in order to locate that same level of satisfaction that they acquired inside meditation (with eyes closed).  Consequently, one’s capacity for super-subtle sensory perception outside meditation is enhanced markedly.</p>
<p>Possession of highly-enhanced sensory acuity gives one the advantage of being able to detect subtle change occurring in the phenomenal world.  </p>
<p>At every moment, everything is changing to assist the inexorable process of evolution.  All seeds of future events are available here in the present.  If only we possess the sensory sensitivity to be able to detect change-in-genesis, then we are able to detect the future-in-the-making.  When we can detect the subtle shifts that occur constantly causing progressive change, then, also, we will find that our expectations spontaneously align themselves with what actually is going on, rather than our relying utterly upon the shoddy guesswork of a speculating intellect— whose capacity for forecast and prediction is notoriously inaccurate.</p>
<p>Much suffering in life is brought about by our being blind-sided by changes that occur when change is not expected by us.  This suffering makes it extremely difficult to understand how change is evolutionary, and this can cause deep sadness.  </p>
<p>However, when, through regular practise of our Advanced Technique, the senses gain that capacity for super-subtle perception of minute progressive changes, then we are more attuned; we are able better to sense probabilities, better equipped to avert dangers before they become inevitable, and able better to be in the right place at the right time, able to identify opportunities and to make the most of them.</p>
<p>In addition, the greater joy of subtler, more acute perception in daily life increases our wisdom, our ready insight into and understanding of everything.  Ultimately, one is liberated by ever-increasing degrees to enjoy life more and more, and thereby to fulfill life’s purpose.</p>
<p>It is good after each successive year of regular, twice-daily meditation to learn the next iteration of one’s meditation technique, to enhance the depth and the regularity of the experience of Ritam.<br />
 <br />
Advanced Techniques are available to be taught by specially-qualified Initiators of Vedic Meditation worldwide.</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom Knoles</p>
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		<title>Meditation Raises Kundalini</title>

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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Nov 2009 19:02:09 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Kundalini]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[I often get thoughtful questions from meditators that represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, along with my answers to these questions, may be beneficial to many of you.  Therefore, I like to share these exchanges with our community from time to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I often get thoughtful questions from meditators that represent experiences that may be shared by other meditators.  Knowing that you are having experiences in common with other meditators, along with my answers to these questions, may be beneficial to many of you.  Therefore, I like to share these exchanges with our community from time to time.  I think many of you may find the following exchange interesting.</p>
<p>                           &#8211; Thom</p>
<p><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Question 1: </span></em></strong><em>  For over a year now I&#8217;ve experienced significant bodily sensations during, and sometimes outside of, meditation.  Often the sensations feel like electric shocks.  Sometimes my shoulders jerk up violently or my head will quickly turn left or right.  I experience tingles and twitching. These sensations often occur in patterns.  Sometimes significant heat is generated followed by a feeling of release.  I&#8217;m assuming that this is stress release procedures, because that is what it feels like.  I don&#8217;t know of other people who have had similar experiences. Can you elucidate and give a context for these experiences?</em></p>
<p><em><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Question 2: </span></strong> Because of what I just described, most of my meditation time is devoted to awareness of these body sensations.  In one respect, they often replace the mantra as my focal point, and I follow the awareness through my body because it is more charming than other thoughts.  The sensations themselves have deeper and deeper levels of subtlety as well.  However, I don&#8217;t often (as far as I can tell) transcend thoughts (because the sensations are there), and there is limited time during meditation when it is effortless to hear my mantra.  Do you have advice on the matter?</em></p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Thom</span></strong>:  &#8220;Kundalini&#8221; is the name given to consciousness-energy that unites one&#8217;s individuality with The Totality.  This lively energy stream enters the body through the soles of the feet, rises through the legs and then pools at the base of the spine.  From the base of the spine it moves upward through the spine via a chimney, the &#8220;shushumna&#8221;, which acts as the conduit through which the kundalini reaches the brain.  Finally, kundalini exits the body through the crown of the head.  Its effect is to awaken consciousness in the direction of Unity Consciousness, from whatever state of consciousness one is in.  <br />
A certain minimum flow of kundalini is required to be conscious at all.  Complete absence of kundalini means absence of consciousness in the human body (&#8220;body death&#8221;).  A trickle of kundalini, at least, must occur at all times.</p>
<p>When stress is present in the body, one effect is that food fails to be digested completely.  One product of undigested food, &#8220;ama&#8221; (a sticky white viscous substance) builds up in all the conduits (&#8220;shrotas&#8221;) of the body, including within the shushumna-shrota.  When, during meditation, the body gains deep rest twice daily, the digestive system becomes more powerful and ama is dissolved naturally from within all the shrotas, including the shushumna-shrota.  The kundalini, which has backed-up in a pool at the base of the spine, is released to travel up the shushumna exactly at the rate that the ama-blocks dissolve from within the shushumna.  So, if a sudden dissolution of ama occurs, then a sudden release of kundalini will accompany that.  When kundalini rises suddenly like this, it creates the range of sensations you describe (and others), as it flows up the shushumna.  When the flash-flood of kundalini meets a new block within the shushumna, it creates impact sensations, heat, coolness or other sensations caused by friction, as it works at removing the blocks.  This is not unlike a flash-flood of river-water being released and removing boulders, tree-trunks and other obstacles in its way.</p>
<p>When the shushumna becomes cleared of ama, the sensations of kundalini fade to nothing.  In a meditator whose shushumna is relatively clear to begin with, the kundalini rises without sensation and is either unremarkable or not even ever detected as a sensation.  Likewise, if considerable purification occurs, then the kundalini will have risen and will remain flowing, but without sensation.  </p>
<p>In this light, you surmise that your sensations are related to stress-release is absolutely correct.</p>
<p>It is important to note that the benefits of a rising kundalini are present, whether or not we feel anything while meditating.  Those benefits include more creativity, greater alertness, heightened perceptual acuity, and a healthier body.  In short, the many advantages you&#8217;ve reported upon.</p>
<p>Your approach is correct of continuing to meditate effortlessly when kundalini sensations and movements occur.</p>
<p>Our policy is that there is no sensation that causes us not to be able effortlessly to think thoughts.  Therefore, effortless favouring of the mantra, even with these sensations, is a possibility, and is our preference.  However, we are not willing to use effort to enforce that preference, so if at any time you seem to be forgetting to repeat the mantra, then do not try to persist in repeating it, do not try to keep on remembering it; it is okay if you lose the mantra spontaneously.  When consciously you realise that the mantra is gone, then do come back to repeating it, just as a faint idea, and take it as it comes.</p>
<p>Feeling the sensations of the kundalini is an alternative, any time that the sensation is so powerful that you cannot be effortlessly with your mantra.  It is important to remember that, as your meditation progresses, your ability to experience the Absolute field of Being, along with thinking, is going to enhance.  The Absolute field becomes less and less transcendental (beyond thought) as practise continues more and more.</p>
<p>Finally, some Vedic Yoga and Vedic Pranayama (breathing technique), done before each meditation, will strengthen the body subtly and lessen the impact of these natural kundalini sensations during meditation.  Go to vedicnetwork.com and locate any convenient Initiator of Vedic Meditation, who will be happy to demonstrate the procedures for you to learn to do them at home.</p>
<p><strong><em> </em></strong></p>
<p><strong><em><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Question 3: </span></em></strong><em> Meditation has improved nearly all aspects of my life in subtle but dramatic ways.  I could go on and on.  Fundamentally, I make choices and have thoughts that are efficient and positive and improve my life and the lives of my friends and family.  It is happening right under my nose and is becoming more and more powerful.  There are certain irrelevant psychological responses, however, that have hung around and even augmented.  In particular, for the past 5 years I have had a fear of flying on airplanes, because of the enclosed space and lack of air etc.  I know planes are absolutely safe and I&#8217;ve travelled around the world countless times before.  But now, as I get deeper into meditation, this fear has augmented, such that I can hardly bear even the thought of flying.  On planes themselves I have quite frightening stress reactions.  I&#8217;ve become hyper aware of my stress reactions which causes some stressors to affect me more potently now than they did previous to meditating.  Is this hypersensitivity an often seen phase that meditators go through?</em></p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Thom</span>:  </strong>This fear naturally will evaporate, as meditation progresses, as will all fear.  Instead of suppressing the fear, your body now is offering it up for deletion.  Before we can delete something from our computer, we have first to highlight it.  This fear is now highlighted for deletion, and its high-lit status is making it appear to be stronger.  Just go ahead and delete it now.</p>
<p>Thank you for your questions and your report of progress!</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva</p>
<p>Thom Knoles</p>
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		<title>The Art of Parenting</title>

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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Sep 2009 21:06:23 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Family Relationships]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Narayana (na-RAA-ya-na) Ragain-Knoles was born to Tiffany Ragain and me on August 28th.  With three brothers and four sisters, Narayana evens up the girl-boy ratio in my children.
Now in my 37th year of fatherhood, and with the arrival of a new child, here are my reflections on the art of parenting.  I think this will [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Narayana (na-RAA-ya-na) Ragain-Knoles was born to Tiffany Ragain and me on August 28th.  With three brothers and four sisters, Narayana evens up the girl-boy ratio in my children.</p>
<p>Now in my 37th year of fatherhood, and with the arrival of a new child, here are my reflections on the art of parenting.  I think this will be informative to the parents, and non-parents in our community as it speaks to each one of us, born into this world from the field of absolute manifest and striving to live our dharma. </p>
<p>Though a child&#8217;s consciousness is new-born to this generation, it is not new to life or to living.  Parents do set the initial conditions and attract the consciousness to be born; but the <strong><em>art</em></strong> of parenting goes beyond that.</p>
<p>Every newborn consciousness brings with him ambition kindled by his unfulfilled desires, but vibrant deep within his very existence is his dharma, his personal role in the evolution of his generation.</p>
<p>In the Vedic worldview, unfulfilled desires are one product of one&#8217;s karma, while the personal evolutionary role vibrant within one is one&#8217;s dharma.  A child&#8217;s dharma forms the foundations of his character; a child&#8217;s karma forges his personality.  </p>
<p>When dharma is recognized and lived fully, then the growing child works out his karma naturally and frictionlessly, either by fulfilling his desires through manifesting their objects, or by experiencing the desires&#8217; source within the inner bliss of Being, thereby expanding beyond the desires&#8217; boundaries.  The result of dharma-recognition is liberation, a life of heaven on earth.</p>
<p>The art of parenting lies in helping the child to discover first his dharma as the means to prevail over his karma.  That is, for the child first to re-cognise his personal role in the evolution of his generation, then to use that role to fulfill his desires.  This approach will employ desire-fulfillment as a training ground for exercising one&#8217;s dharma.  For this to occur spontaneously, regular practise of Vedic Meditation by parent and child is pivotal.</p>
<p>In the absence of dharma-recognition, the child&#8217;s only remaining endeavour, attempting solely to fulfill his unfulfilled desires, will possess life and misguide the process of living.  This makes life karma-oriented rather than dharma-oriented, dominated by personality instead of identified with radiant character, ruled by ambition without embracing its purpose.</p>
<p>Therefore, as parents we have the responsibility not merely to help our children fulfill their desires, not merely to help them figure out &#8216;who&#8217; they are.  Rather, we must encourage them to re-cognise <strong><em>what</em></strong> they are [all-inclusive consciousness]; to know <strong><em>why</em></strong> they are here in this generation. </p>
<p>We must help children to live their dharma.</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom Knoles</p>
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		<title>The Purpose of Meditation</title>

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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jul 2009 00:13:53 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Meditation]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[We should re-examine &#8216;the purpose of meditation&#8217;.   To do this, first we must clear away preconceived ideas of &#8220;what should be happening during my meditation&#8221;.
In this meditation, we do not try to control our experience.  What we want is to transcend control, to let go, to allow Nature&#8217;s intelligence to take over.  That is why [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We should re-examine &#8216;the purpose of meditation&#8217;.   To do this, first we must clear away preconceived ideas of &#8220;what should be happening during my meditation&#8221;.</p>
<p>In this meditation, we do not try to control our experience.  What we want is to transcend control, to let go, to allow Nature&#8217;s intelligence to take over.  That is why we say that this is a natural practice.  Nothing is involved but the nature of the mind and the nature of the body.  No intervention by one&#8217;s individuality is necessary.  And that is why during this practice we do not use effort.  Effort means control and its use in meditation takes away naturalness.</p>
<p>When we say &#8216;nature of the mind&#8217; and &#8216;nature of the body&#8217; we mean this: By nature the mind&#8217;s tendency is always to move toward greater happiness (whenever a choice presents itself).  It is this tendency that causes the mind to follow the mantra, whose nature, in turn, is to become more and more subtle simply through effortless repetition silently in meditation.  The subtler strata of thought are more charming intrinsically than the gross conscious thinking level.</p>
<p>As the mantra becomes subtler it also becomes more charming.  This increased charm attracts the mind inward &#8211; and here is the crucial point &#8211; as far as the body will allow.  Why do we say &#8216;as far as the BODY will allow&#8217;? </p>
<p>Because mind and body are intimately connected.  If the body is storing some fatigue (and whose body is not?), then, in the midst of meditation, the body may recognise an opportunity to rid itself of that fatigue.</p>
<p>Dozing will indicate that the body has used a portion of the meditation sitting to purify itself of deep tiredness; the body is attempting to normalize &#8211; that&#8217;s all.</p>
<p>However, if intellectually we decide that this natural function does not match our concept of &#8216;the purpose of meditation&#8217;, then we may reject our own natural response, and resent our body&#8217;s need to rest in that way. Then we are in danger of using effort to &#8217;stay awake&#8217; because of an intellectual idea we cherished about &#8216;the purpose of meditation&#8217;.</p>
<p>Instead of that approach, what we should know is: &#8220;The use of effort defeats the purpose of this meditation&#8221;.</p>
<p>So the true purpose of this meditation is simply to allow whatever happens naturally to happen, and not to wish that it shouldn&#8217;t happen.  The true purpose of meditation should be to allow our own intelligence to be one with nature&#8217;s intelligence.  To that end, we take it as it comes.  This is why we do not reject any experience that occurs spontaneously in meditation.</p>
<p>By the way, there is a limited amount of fatigue in the physiology, so the dozing trend will clear up.</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva,</p>
<p>Thom Knoles</p>
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		<title>The Power of Regular Meditation</title>

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		<pubDate>Sun, 07 Jun 2009 21:15:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[We can feel the stress increasing in the collective consciousness of our countries and of our world.  We read and watch daily the effect of the collective unhappiness of billions of individuals.  Perhaps we feel the effect of that collective stress tarnishing our own lives &#8211; in our family dynamics, in our own bodies.  It [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We can feel the stress increasing in the collective consciousness of our countries and of our world.  We read and watch daily the effect of the collective unhappiness of billions of individuals.  Perhaps we feel the effect of that collective stress tarnishing our own lives &#8211; in our family dynamics, in our own bodies.  It manifests in the form of fear or anxiety; a feeling that time is running out.  This, in turn, can manifest the twin diseases of selfishness and desperate behavior.</p>
<p>Vedic Meditators possess an uniquely powerful strategy for reversing this polluting effect: we know and use the power of orderliness and coherence that regular meditation brings.  We have seen it work in our own lives; we have seen it work in the lives of our family and friends.  We have also seen the positive effect our own meditation has had on those who have no interest in it!  We have verified that the unit of collective peace and abundance is individual peace and abundance.  What we need is more meditators- and the need is urgent.</p>
<p>We stand at a turning point in world history. We could watch as collective stress forces the minds and hands of national politics, driving an agenda of selfishness and desperation.  Or, in their own quiet way, meditators could bring about a more ordered and coherent influence in the collective consciousness by awakening more creative intelligence from within ourselves, and then increase this by bringing our friends and family to it.</p>
<p>I will do what I do best, and I will need your help.</p>
<p>Those who meditate already should attend my meetings and courses whenever possible.  And for to those who have not yet availed themselves of this supreme knowledge, come to my introductory talk and let me show you &#8211; not merely tell you &#8211; what meditation can do to make your life better in every way.</p>
<p>Anything of this importance and urgency deserves to be done on a big scale.</p>
<p>We need urgently to bring Vedic Meditation into the lives of as many new people as we can.</p>
<p>Almost everyone &#8211; thousands &#8211; come to learn meditation because they see its effect on family and on friends.  This fact alone is very telling of its verifiable effects.</p>
<p>I look forward to seeing all of you again, to feel and witness the powerful effect of our collective meditations.</p>
<p>Jai Guru Deva</p>
<p>Thom Knoles</p>
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