Dear Sangeetha...,
It is easy to find fault with others...
Or to stone at any plant or tree or house,
That we happen to see on our sides,
Especially without hearing those "others"
About the fault we are finding with them.
Meantime, you have to know,
What the parents do between themselves
May be looked wrong or indigestible
By the young ignorant/immature children.
Still parents, between themselves,
Interacts differently in their own different world.
A master does not teach the disciples
What the Master does need for himself.,
Rather he teaches the disciple
What, he think, the disciple needs for the disciple.
A tailor designs and stitches the dresses
Suiting to the customers coming to him;
Not suiting to tailor himself.
So, you should know expect the tailor
To wear the same dress, in same size and style,
He has stitched for you.
I don't know Nityananda
And I am not here to justify or incriminate him
On whatever he does or has done.
He can be justified
If he is justified by him before him
But, we didn't hear Nityananda...
About what he did or does say or do....
At least whether he advocates what he does.
If he advocates what he does
And has no conflict
Or friction in and with himself
He is not at fault
At least before himself.
Except for and towards
Others' misconception
Or wrong perception...
About him
Sangeetha,
Reaching a stage
You are neither wrong nor right.
You are what you are
For God.
No right, no wrong
No back, no front.
Child may have its own opinion
But parents have their own relationship
Between themselves.
Being your parents,
They don’t change themselves to be
Not a man or a woman
Patients may have a version about Doctor.
But on whatever ground
A doctor is not bound to consume
The medicine he prescribes to his patients.
So, such a blind accusation against anyone,
Personally will be wrong
And if Nityanada is wrong
He is wrong as an individual
And if he did wrong to himself,
Against his conviction and preaching,
Then only he is at wrong.
But, there is nothing wrong with the concept of
Ananda or Parmananda or Nityananda,
Which always is there
For those who have it.
With regards,
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
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