Sunday, July 28, 2019

Getting back on the spiritual path



After our traumatic stay at the Soul Coach Training Programme, I felt that I was dragged a hundred feet backward in my spiritual path. We had to go to some silent place, meditate and rejuvenate. So off we went to Shringeri and Kanhangad in April 2019.

Shringeri




We reached Shringeri by 3.30 in the afternoon and straightaway went to the guest house Sri Bharati Tirtha Krupa where we had booked a room. The pillow covers didn’t look clean and with some reluctance, they changed them. For dinner we went to the temple dinner hall, a huge one that can accommodate 3000 people at a time. The food was very disappointing; it was just rice and some colored water that was a weak representation of rasam and it was served as if it was a chore. For the rest of our stay, we never ate there again.

Durga Parameshwari temple

The next day brought some great divine experiences for us. It was my husband’s birthday and after bath in the morning we went to the Durga Parameshwari temple.
We were elated to see that there was no crowd, so we could sit and meditate in peace. After some time, in the adjacent school, morning prayers were going on and then they sang, “Happy Birthday” song for some student!!

Kalbhairav temple

We came back to the main temple area and started walking to Kalbhairav temple. On the way we saw the library and stepped in to have a look. Since the librarian couldn’t answer our questions, he went inside and brought a Swamiji who was there for the last 15 years. He was very knowledgeable and we had an interesting conversation.
Meanwhile we got a call from a friend and we had to rush back, instead of proceeding to the Kalbhairav temple. Our friend took us to the Bettada Malahanikareshwara temple. It is situated on a hill top and the moment we reached, Aarti started. For lunch we went to ‘Akshaya mess’ and had a delicious lunch, along with mung dal payasam, which made our birthday celebration complete.

After taking some rest in the room, we set out for the Kalbhairav temple again. It was a 15 minute walk uphill. We didn’t know the way, but as a man was walking ahead, we just followed him and reached the temple. I felt strong vibrations there, sat and chanted mantra 108 times. When the chanting was over, I heard the ‘thud’ of many falling fruits from a tree nearby. It was anjili chakka as we call in Malayalam, or Fruit of Artocarpus Hirsutus or Anhili.

 When I told my husband that we eat them in Kerala, he told it must be Kalbhairav’s Prasad for us. I picked up a broken fruit, saw that the top portion was clean, and we consumed our prasadam.
On the way back, dusk was approaching, there was nobody in sight and we were just walking, praying it was the correct way back. I suddenly noticed that a dog was walking with us. Whenever I stopped and looked, it would also stop, and resume walking once I started walking again. After a while we reached the library where we had spent time in the morning. From there we knew the way and the dog just disappeared. For those who don’t know, dog is the vehicle of Kalabhairav.

Anjaneya and Kalikamba temples

 The four dikpalaka temples in Shringeri are those of Durga Parameshwari, Kalabhairava, Anjaneya and Kalikamba. The first two we had visited, now set out to visit the last two. They are also powerful temples and it was a joy to absorb all those vibrations. It was a great day with so many positive experiences and I could feel my real self slowly surfacing.

Another day in bliss

After breakfast on the next day, we walked across the bridge to the Vyasa mandir.
Vyasa mandir from far off, and a closer view 

There was nobody else, allowing us to spend time meditating. Then we drove to Kigga, which is a small village located at a distance of 9 km from Shringeri. The main attraction of Kigga is Sri Rishya Shringeshwara temple. Dedicated to Rishyasringa, the temple stands on the site where Rishyasringa was absorbed in the celestial light. Built during Vijayanagara period, the temple houses a linga of a unique shape, with three protuberances resembling horns.
During the time of the formation of Sharada Peetha, Sri Adi Shankaracharya visited  this holy place of Kigga. It is after this visit that he named the place as Shringeri derived from the name Rishya - Sringa. Hence, the place became famous as Shringeri Sharada Peetha.

On the river bank

In the evening we went and sat near the river, absorbed in meditation. Gazing at the setting Sun filled me up with all the energy that was depleted at the SCTP.

The river was filled with fish

We have visited Shringeri a couple of times before, but every time we would just go to the main temple and return. It was a unique experience this time, of staying there and visiting all the associated temples.

To Anandashram, Kanhangad



The drive to Kanhangad was scenic, and I noticed many water bodies. We reached Anandashram by 5 pm. After completing the formalities at the reception, we went to the dining hall for tea and then checked into a room in the Krishnabai block.

It was a big room with nice attached bathroom with geyser. I am writing this because in Shringeri guest house we had to pay and get hot water for bath through the room boy in the morning, which was not very convenient.

About Anandashram

Anandashram was founded by Swami Ramdas, endearingly called Beloved Papa, at Kanhangad in Kerala in 1931. The ideal the Ashram holds before it is “Universal Love and Service based upon a vision of divinity in all beings and creatures of the world. Here every man, woman or child, to whatever denomination, creed of caste the person may belong, shall have free access.”

The Ashram provides free food for all visitors, and free accommodation for a limited period of time. There are special buildings for wandering sadhus. We have had free food in many temples (prasadam), but have never experienced the love and concern with which the food is served here.

The food is vegetarian and usually includes plenty of milk products. The Ashram has a Goshala (Cow Shed), with over 50 heads of cattle. The milk yield is passed on to the Ashram Bhojan Shala (Canteen) which feeds not only the devotees but also the poor and hungry who happen to come to the Ashram. The Goshala is fitted with ceiling fans to keep the cows cool, and according to one source, in the Goshala one encounters "some of the happiest cows you'll ever see in India."
The Ashram is centred on the single activity of chanting the mantra "Om Sri Ram Jai Ram Jai Jai Ram."During the lifetime of Swami Ramdas, the mantra was chanted throughout the day in the main Bhajan Hall, except for the times when he would engage in discussions with visitors in the Bhajan Hall after lunch and dinner. Today the mantra is chanted continuously from 6 am to 6 pm in one of the three samadhis in the Ashram: the samadhis of Swami Ramdas, Mataji Krishnabai, and Swami Sachidananda. Spaces are also available for silent meditation. However, visitors are not under any compulsion to participate in these activities. So all those who take part in various programmes are doing it from their heart.

After the mahasamadhi of Swami Ramdas in 1963, Mataji Krishnabai headed Anandashram until her own passing in 1989. Swami Sachidananda, who joined the ashram in 1949, took over the leadership of the Ashram until he passed away in 2008. Now Swami Muktananda heads the Ashram. We listened to his discourses and had a personal meeting too.

The message for me

It was such a divine experience to participate in various programmes in the ashram, I specially cherish the memory of flower offering in the morning and bhajan in the evening. The message that I got from my stay was “Everybody’s body and path are different. Sadhana should let our innerself bloom. We need to go deeper and deeper and find our own method to bloom to our full potential. Sadhana is done to remove the obstacles from our spiritual path. We should not try to copy anybody, just take pointers and move on...’’

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