Wednesday, 17 June 2026

AMM X SUFFRNG X TO DE-EGOTISE AND MK IT A FLUTE FOR KRSNA

SLO LYF

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Living a slow life has calmed my nervous system. I don’t panic over every little thing anymore. I don’t feel guilty for resting. I don’t treat every moment like it needs to be productive. Some mornings I just make coffee and sit in silence. Looking at the sky. The birds. Breathing in the morning calm. Some evenings I stare out the window and watch the sky turn orange. Sometimes I read 20 pages. Sometimes I read none. I don’t feel the need to optimize every second of my existence anymore. That constant pressure to “do more,” “be more,” has disappeared. And in its place came what I actually needed: calm. I’ve realized life becomes meaningful the moment you stop rushing through it. Meaning was never hidden. It's was always there in the little things that made you feel peaceful and fully alive.

DMHC X OMPTI ONE MORE PRSN TO JGNORE

NON DOERSHIP X GUNAS X VASANAS

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Here is a clear, deep, Advaita‑aligned explanation of Guṇas × Past Conditioning — the exact intersection you’re asking about — expressed with precision and philosophical sharpness.


How Guṇas × Past Conditioning Work in Advaita Vedānta

1. The Guṇas: The Operating System of Prakṛti

In Advaita, Prakṛti (nature) functions through three guṇas:

  • Sattva — clarity, harmony, light
  • Rajas — movement, desire, restlessness
  • Tamas — inertia, dullness, resistance

These guṇas are not moral categories.
They are energetic tendencies that shape the body‑mind’s behaviour.

The key Advaitic point:
Guṇas act upon guṇas. The Self does nothing.


2. Past Conditioning (Vāsanās): The Stored Momentum of Experience

Every experience leaves a subtle trace called a vāsanā:

  • habits
  • fears
  • desires
  • emotional patterns
  • unconscious tendencies

These vāsanās accumulate over lifetimes and form saṃskāras — deep grooves in the psyche.

Linked idea: Past conditioning in Advaita


3. How Guṇas and Conditioning Interact

Think of it like this:

  • Guṇas provide the energy.
  • Vāsanās provide the direction.

Together they create the apparent doer.

Example

A person with:

  • Rajas + vāsanā of ambition → restlessness, striving
  • Tamas + vāsanā of fear → avoidance, withdrawal
  • Sattva + vāsanā of inquiry → contemplation, clarity

The same guṇa behaves differently depending on which vāsanā it energises.


4. Why This Matters in Advaita

Advaita’s radical insight:

**“You are not the guṇas, nor the conditioning.

You are the witness of both.”**

The body‑mind acts according to:

  • its guṇic composition
  • its inherited conditioning

But Ātman remains untouched.

Linked idea: Ātman as witness


5. The Mechanism of Action (Kriyā)

Advaita summarises this beautifully:

“Guṇāḥ guṇeṣu vartante.”

The guṇas act upon the guṇas.

Meaning:

  • Rajas pushes a rajasic vāsanā into action
  • Tamas suppresses or dulls a tamasic vāsanā
  • Sattva illuminates a sattvic vāsanā

The ego claims: “I am doing.”
But the guṇas are simply interacting with conditioning.

Linked idea: Guṇas drive action


6. Liberation: Seeing the Mechanism Clearly

Mokṣa is not changing the guṇas.
It is disidentifying from them.

When you see:

  • “This anger is rajasic conditioning.”
  • “This laziness is tamasic conditioning.”
  • “This clarity is sattvic conditioning.”

…you stop saying “I am angry / lazy / clear.”

You recognise:

“This is Prakṛti functioning. I am the witness.”

Linked idea: Non‑doership in Advaita


7. The Non‑Doer Insight

When the mechanism is seen:

  • The sense of doership collapses
  • The ego loses its fuel
  • The Self shines as pure awareness

This is the heart of Advaita.


One‑Line Essence

“Guṇas supply the energy, conditioning supplies the pattern — the Self supplies neither.”


If you want, I can also create:

  • a diagrammatic breakdown
  • a Krishnamurti‑style explanation
  • a mnemonic set
  • a metaphor‑based explanation

Choose the next direction.


KRSNAMURTI X Anger is thought burning in its own friction.

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ThemeAnecdote (Original)TaglineLinked Concept
FearA boy fears exams. Observing fear without escape dissolves it.Fear ends when the watcher stops running.Fear as projection
AmbitionA businessman chases success endlessly. He sees ambition is escape.Ambition is the slow death of clarity.Conditioning
LonelinessA woman feels lonely in a crowd. She sees loneliness is self‑isolation.Loneliness ends where self‑concern dissolves.Self & isolation
AngerA monk burns with anger. He sees anger is thought in friction.Anger is thought burning in its own friction.Observer = observed
Enlightenment SeekingA seeker wants enlightenment. Desire itself is the barrier.The search ends when the seeker ends.Ending psychological time
EducationA teacher demands discipline. He sees fear kills learning.Education flowers only in freedom.Learning without fear
DeathA man fears death. He sees fear is thought projecting the future.Death is frightening only when imagined.Ending fear
Love & JealousyA lover is jealous. He sees possession is fear disguised.Love cannot bloom where fear takes root.Love without attachment
KnowledgeA scholar hides behind scriptures. Awareness breaks the wall.Knowledge is a wall; awareness is a window.Limits of thought
PeaceA man meditates mechanically. Peace comes only through understanding.Peace is the shadow of understanding.Freedom from the known
ComparisonA student compares himself constantly. He sees comparison breeds misery.Comparison is the thief of innocence.Ending comparison
DesireA young man is torn by desire. He sees desire is continuity of thought.Desire is memory seeking repetition.Desire & thought
SorrowA grieving mother seeks comfort. Seeing sorrow fully ends it.Sorrow ends in the light of total attention.Ending sorrow
AuthorityA seeker clings to gurus. He sees authority breeds dependence.Truth cannot be followed; it must be seen.Freedom from authority
HabitA man trapped in routine sees habit is mechanical living.Habit is the slow petrification of the mind.Mechanical thought
ViolenceA youth is angry at society. He sees violence begins inwardly.Violence begins where understanding ends.Inner conflict
PleasureA man chases pleasure. He sees pleasure breeds fear of loss.Pleasure plants the seed of fear.Pleasure & fear
ObservationA girl watches a leaf fall. Pure observation reveals silence.Observation without choice is freedom.Choiceless awareness
TimeA man lives in regret and hope. He sees psychological time is suffering.Time ends when thought stops becoming.Ending becoming
SilenceA seeker forces silence. True silence arises when conflict ends.Silence is the absence of the self.Inner quiet
RelationshipA couple argues endlessly. They see relationship mirrors the self.Relationship is self‑revelation.Mirror of the self
FreedomA man wants freedom from society. True freedom is inward.Freedom is seeing the prison as thought.Inner liberation
OrderA woman seeks order through control. Order comes from clarity.Order is the fragrance of understanding.Natural order
MeditationA meditator counts breaths. Krishnamurti shows meditation is awareness.Meditation is the movement of insight.True meditation
ConflictA man battles himself. He sees conflict is division.Conflict ends when the observer ends.Ending division
BeautyA painter seeks beauty in form. Beauty arises in stillness.Beauty is perception without the self.Aesthetic awareness
ResponsibilityA man blames society. Responsibility begins inwardly.Responsibility is seeing oneself clearly.Inner responsibility
TruthA seeker asks for truth. Truth is a living movement, not a conclusion.Truth is a pathless land.Pathless truth
AwarenessA woman practices awareness. Awareness is not practice — it is seeing.Awareness is the flame that burns illusion.Pure seeing
The SelfA man asks what the self is. The self is memory in motion.The self is the echo of yesterday.Ending the self

SRI M

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Then I saw a copy of Dr. Radhakrishnan’s translation and commentaries on the Upanishads in the bottom shelf and bent down to pull it out. At that exact moment, three hardbound books landed on my neck from the top shelf. After massaging my neck with my hands to get rid of the pain, I picked up the books. One was The Perennial Philosophy by Aldous Huxley, and the other two, were volumes of The Commentaries on Living by J. Krishnamurti. That was my introduction to Krishnamurti, and I must say that, although I do not totally agree with Krishnamurti regarding various issues, ‘The Commentaries on Living’ was certainly useful in resolving many a Vedantic conundrum. However, I cannot explain how the books fell, for other than me, there was nobody near that particular bookshelf

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