| These days it is common
for people to take up the practice of yoga, breathing exercises,
or various meditation techniques for good health and inner peace.
Often, people presume that because they do these techniques,
they are engaged in “spiritual” practice and do
not require a Guru. However, true spiritual practice requires
much more than mere techniques. For the practitioner engaged
in the esoteric Spiritual process, it is the devotional relationship
to the Guru that makes real Spiritual growth possible. The esoteric
Spiritual process also requires the practice of various disciplines,
forms of meditation, and so on—but no regime of disciplines
and techniques is sufficient to lead to Realization. The force
of the ego takes time and great Counter-Force to transcend,
and cannot be undone solely by an occasional vision or experience
of the Divine now and then. The ego will inevitably use any
and every discipline and technique as a means of reinforcing
its own entrenched position—even in the midst of the most
sincere efforts to surrender egoity. No matter how well equipped
with disciplines and techniques, the ego, on its own cannot
Realize the Truth. Only the Guru can Grant Realization, as a
Gift of Grace.
The Spiritual Way is based on a simple understanding, “You
become what you meditate on.” In other words,
you take on the qualities of whatever or whoever you give
your attention to. This principle is seen at work in every
aspect of life. Whatever one is most intimately associated
with, or one surrenders to most fully, determines the quality
of consciousness. If one meditates on any ordinary thing,
then one takes on its qualities. If we are obsessed with buying
things we become “shopping minded”. If we allow
television to be the focus of our attention, we become “TV
minded”. Consciousness follows attention.
Thus, to grant your attention to the Guru is to receive the
Guru's Grace and to Realize the Guru's Condition. This simple
principle allows the devotee to feel, receive, and be transformed
by the Transmission of the Guru. This is a secret that has
been understood since the ancient days and verified by Spiritual
practitioners of Hinduism, Tibetan Buddhism, Sufism, Judaism, Sikhism,
and esoteric Christianity. Real-God-Realization is only possible
through the Appearance and Grace of the Sat-Guru. It is not
possible to Realize Identification with the Divine simply
on the basis of one's own willful self-effort.
The principle of Satsang with Avatar Adi Da Samraj, or living
in direct heart-Communion with Him, is the supreme “method”
of the Way of Adidam. Through a process of sympathetic resonance, devotees
begin to duplicate the Guru's awakened condition. Traditionally,
in a genuine Spiritual culture, it was understood that the
Gurus were the greatest wealth, the most valuable Treasures
of the realm, to be protected and honored above all. The Realizers
were acknowledged as the Source of true Wisdom and of the
Transmission of the Living Force of the Divine. In these settings,
the need for the Sat-Guru himself was not in doubt.
Spiritual Transmission
A basic principle of all life is that we all communicate
or “transmit” to others who come into our company
the present state of our consciousness. If we are happy, others
feel that happiness, no matter what we are doing. Likewise,
if we are disturbed, others feel that anxiety. The communication
of our state is instant and immediate. Just so, and to a magnified
degree, in the case of the Real-God-Realized Guru. When we come
into the Company of such a Being, we immediately, and to whatever
degree we are open to it, feel his or her Transmission of
the Divine, naturally and spontaneously. This is the process
of Spiritual Transmission described in many traditions. It
is the great Gift of the Guru to the devotee.
Since ancient times, it has been recognized by esoteric Spiritual
practitioners that it is the Guru’s Spiritual Transmission
that awakens the devotee--not mere thinking, philosophy or
techniques. Guru-devotion is most potent in relation to a
Siddha-Guru—a Guru who not only Teaches a Way of Liberation
but actually Transmits his or her own State of Liberation
to devotees. By means of true devotion to a Siddha-Guru, a
rightly prepared devotee is able to receive the Gift of that
Transmission and (thereby) undergo a Graceful process of purification,
transformation, and (ultimately) Realization.
| “Everyone
transmits. All of you are transmitters. Each one of you
emits invisible forces. These forces are locked up in
your limited messages, and they reinforce the same limitations
in others . . . Realizers of one or another degree of
Spiritual development likewise by nature spontaneously
Transmit what they are. . . . Those less evolved Transmit
their Realization, and those more evolved Transmit their
Realization. Everything transmits. The stones transmit,
the sky does, the TV does. Since everything and everyone
transmits states of existence, since life, or existence
itself, is participation in transmissions of all kinds,
the best thing you can do is to associate with the greatest
possible Transmission. . . .You become what you meditate
on.” -- Avatar Adi Da Samraj |
Although it is continuous with the esoteric essence of the
entire Great Tradition of religious and Spiritual endeavor,
the practice of Guru-devotion in Adidam is unique, because
the tangible Spiritual Transmission of the “Bright”
is a unique gift given by Avatar Adi Da’s Divine Grace.
Divine Distraction
Divine
Distraction, or devotional love of the Guru, is the vehicle
through which the devotee forgets his or her egoic self and
opens up to Divine Grace. It is the heart of the Guru-devotee
relationship and the esoteric Spiritual Process. Such ecstatic
Love is the essence of all that Avatar Adi Da Samraj Reveals
to His devotees. Through His Grace, His devotees Realize that
there is Only Real God. Avatar Adi Da Samraj
exists to Offer the Transmission of this Love, the Transmission
of the Infinite Feeling that is Real God. This is His only purpose.
He does not see humanity as a collection of "poor other
people" who need to be Helped by Him from His superior
position as the Guru. He sees that ordinary beings are not
experiencing or enjoying Who they Are, their own Divine Nature.
He Transmits to them the Real Love. It is not something that
He tries to do. He Is that Love and It flows out of Him naturally.
The primary "method" of Liberation used by the
Avatar Adi Da Samraj (as well as by the Great Siddhas who
have come before Him) is His sheer Attractiveness. He is the
Divine Form, and His Love is His Attractive Power. For His
true devotees, Avatar Adi Da is the most Radiant, Most Distracting
Object in the universe. To truly see Him is to see no mere
body or personality, but to see and feel the Divine, the Self-Radiant
and Self-Existing Consciousness, which ultimately Outshines
even the His own body-mind.
Traditional literature describes Krishna as lustrous blue,
and the Buddha and Christ with halos around them. How can
a devotee describe what Beloved Sri Adi Da Samraj looks like,
or what it feels like to be in His Company? The Divine Quality
has been metaphorically described—more lustrous than
a thousand moons, more dazzling than lightning in a darkened
sky, more intimate than a lover's arms. But nothing can match
the Divine Vision Itself--this is the only thing that the
Sat-Guru brings. And if the devotee’s heart is too hardened
to receive it, then the Sat-Guru is helpless. He has no trickery,
no easy do-it-yourself techniques or gimmicks to offer. He
can only try to find ways to open the eyes and hearts of devotees
so that they can see and feel What is before them.
When the Sat-Guru is truly recognized at heart, then His devotees
fall in love. Devotees naturally turn their attention to What
is Attractive and their love for their Guru naturally draws
them beyond the things of the world. This divinely distracting
love is greater than anything else. The rest of the world
dims by comparison. Who cares for anything else once one has
tasted that sweetness, that immortal and unimagined Grace?
Devotees do not love the Sat-Guru on the basis of great effort--they
simply respond naturally. Only such Divine Love and Attraction,
and no self-based motive, can keep devotees’ attention
on the Sat-Guru.
Thus in love, egoic tendencies in the body-mind of the devotee
naturally unwind. It may take months or years, or countless
lifetimes, but it does not matter anymore. The devotee is
"in love"—not simply loving, but "in
love", a state beyond memory or conception. It is Joy,
"Even Beyond Every Reason For It". Avatar Adi Da
Samraj is the Giver of Love-Bliss, Who comes only to Love
all beings and Who Transforms all beings if they will only
receive Him and devote their lives to reception of His Love.
As the eye naturally turns to what is lustrous, and the fingers
gravitate to what is soft, so the heart of every man and woman
is spontaneously drawn to the Supremely attractive Avatar.
One surrenders oneself naturally and easily to regard that
Beauty, for the Avatar is "Bright" with a Shine
that only the Divine Emanates. Once His Love has been received
deeply in one's heart, it can never be forgotten. Then, spontaneously,
naturally, and more and more perfectly, one is diverted from
all suffering, all problems, and the usual mortal life. One
becomes absorbed and occupied in Remembrance and Regard of
that Divine Lord. His Love-Filled Glance never leaves one's
memory. To hear His Joyous Laughter cuts through all despair
and bewilderment. To listen to the Leelas of His Divine Play
with all beings gladdens the heart.
Just as one thinks often of one's closest family, even more
so does one's attention remain with the Supreme Sat-Guru Who
is Love Incarnate. In the ecstasy of regarding Him, more and
more the Guru possesses one's attention, granting an enjoyment
that cannot be matched by any worldly pleasure. More and more
one is occupied with thoughts of That One. Tears naturally
well up in the eyes. When there is such Grace, what need is
there for fame, wealth, or conventional pursuits? It is such
Distraction that makes it possible for the devotee to undergo
the sacred ordeal of full transformation required in genuine
Spiritual practice. It is such Attraction to the God-Man that
is the foundation of love, a love which gives the devotee
the capability to endure all the trials that are encountered
in the course of sadhana.
| “I am
not present here merely in order to "rap out"
a philosophy or to distribute techniques that you may
apply to yourself, depending on your intelligence. I Am
Present in the world in order (now, and forever hereafter)
to Offer a (most ultimately) Divinely Liberating relationship
to all those who are willing to assume such a relationship
with Me, to all those who have the capability to be Distracted
by Me (in an absolute love-relationship that is more and
more Distracting). But, if that love-desire-Distraction
is not present in an individual's life, then this sadhana
of the heart-relationship to Me cannot begin.” –
Avatar Adi Da Samraj, Ruchira Avatara Gita |
What about the argument that a Guru is not necessary?
With the modern ideal of the "self-made" man, these
days people believe that just as they might achieve economic
success independently through hard work and effort, so also
Spiritual Realization can be a self-guided enterprise. The
modern man or woman regards the Spiritual Process not as a
matter of surrender to the Divine Reality, but as the acquisition
of techniques, powers, or knowledge, which, when combined
with the cleverness of the individual, will yield the desired
results. Thus has arisen the opinion that the Spiritual Process
can be Realized without the ordeal of real practice or the
Graceful Transmission of the Divine from a Guru. It is believed
that one can talk about Spiritual matters and perform exercises
in the mind or body (yoga, meditation, breathing exercises,
visualizations, mantras, etc.), and that these in themselves
will lead to Enlightenment. One well-known authority on Spiritual
matters, when asked about what type of meditation he practiced,
replied, "Reading." Avatar Adi Da Samraj has described
those involved in such illusions as being in the "talking"
school instead of the “practicing” school.
In the genuine esoteric Spiritual traditions, such approaches
are considered fanciful, deluded, and always fruitless. The
real Spiritual Process is necessarily full of great Grace,
and the human submission required in such a profound process
is undeniably difficult for all egos—whether they are
full of accomplishment or very simple and ordinary. The Spiritual
traditions are full of stories of stubborn aspirants who resist
the demand of the Sat-Guru and who attempt unsuccessfully
to "guru" themselves. Avatar Adi Da Samraj calls
such approaches "self-guruing”.
Today, many individuals set themselves up as great authorities
relative to Spiritual matters, writing books or delivering
lectures, and claiming that in this day and age the Sat-Guru
is no longer necessary, or that the Guru-devotee relationship
does not quite work. They may speak intelligently about Spiritual
matters or appear to be involved in great ascetical practice.
They attempt to establish their authority through great scholarly
knowledge about Spiritual matters and may report some degree
of Spiritual accomplishment or experience. They may speak
about their great insights or describe long hours of various
Spiritual practices. But they remain in the grip of the ego,
precisely because they are not touching the root of what can
only be transcended by the Grace of the Guru—the ego
itself.
Many such individuals who struggle or write most earnestly
about the non-necessity of the Guru-devotee relationship,
or the difficulties inherent in it for the modern era, may
themselves have come into contact with the genuine Spiritual
Process and a true Guru. However, their own fear of submission
to that Process has struck them deeply, for they sense how
it interferes with the plans of the ego. Their popularly expressed
criticism of the Guru-devotee relationship stems from their
own difficulty with the surrender of the ego that genuine
Spiritual practice requires. Such surrender is anathema to
the ego's need to be praised and glamorized.
Even Ramana Maharshi, when asked about the fact that he never
had a Guru, would answer, "How do you know?" He
acknowledged that a Sat-Guru was an absolute necessity (virtually
without exception). The very fact that he was asked this question
so many times shows the extent to which Western influence
had taken hold in India, even in Ramana Maharshi's lifetime.
In Talks with Sri Ramana Maharshi, a seeker asks the Maharshi,
"Is a Master necessary for realization?" He replies,
“Realization is the result of the Master's Grace more
than teachings, lectures, meditation, etc. They are only secondary
aids, whereas the former is the primary and the essential
cause.” |