Friday, 8 May 2026

Sharanagati

 ✨ *God’s eternal law is very simple: Those who do sharanagati (surrender) unto Him receive His grace.*

~🌟 *Swami Mukundananda*

Thursday, 7 May 2026

Challenging truth v comforting lie

 The phrase “challenging truth vs comforting lie” points to a real tradeoff:

  • A challenging truth can hurt, unsettle, or force change — but it gives you a chance to respond to reality as it is.
  • A comforting lie protects you emotionally in the short term — but usually at the cost of clarity, growth, trust, or future consequences.

Examples:

  • “This relationship isn’t working” vs “Things will magically improve.”
  • “I’m not prepared enough” vs “I’ll wing it somehow.”
  • “I’m unhappy in this career” vs “I should just be grateful.”

People often choose the comforting lie because humans are built to avoid pain and uncertainty. But over time, unresolved truth tends to become more expensive.

That said, not every truth needs to be delivered brutally, and not every comforting belief is malicious. Sometimes hope, timing, or emotional readiness matters too.

A useful question is:

Does this belief help me engage with reality more effectively, or avoid it?

Most durable progress — in relationships, work, health, and self-understanding — comes from facing difficult truths while still treating yourself with compassion.


KC

 “Krishna Consciousness” is the English term commonly used for the devotional spiritual practice taught within the movement formally known as the International Society for Krishna Consciousness.

It comes from a direct translation of the Sanskrit idea behind “Kṛṣṇa-bhāvanāmį¹›ta” and similar expressions found in the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition.

Here’s what the phrase is pointing to:


1) “Krishna” as the focus of awareness

In this tradition, Krishna is understood not just as a historical or mythological figure, but as the Supreme Reality / Absolute Truth.

So “Krishna” here means:

  • the ultimate source of all existence
  • the supreme conscious being
  • the object of devotion and remembrance


2) “Consciousness” as attention or awareness

“Consciousness” in this context does not primarily mean abstract philosophy of mind. It means:

  • what your awareness is fixed on
  • what you are mentally and emotionally absorbed in
  • the direction of your thoughts, desires, and identity

So “Krishna consciousness” literally means:

a state of awareness focused on Krishna


3) The practical meaning in the tradition

In practice, “Krishna Consciousness” refers to:

  • remembering Krishna constantly (smarana)
  • devotional chanting (especially the Hare Krishna mantra)
  • seeing reality as related to Krishna
  • living in service (bhakti) rather than ego-centered goals

This is based heavily on teachings in texts like the Bhagavad Gita and the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam, where devotion (bhakti) is described as a direct path to spiritual realization.


4) Why the movement uses this name

The founders of the International Society for Krishna Consciousness chose this phrase because it:

  • shifts spirituality from ritual or belief → to continuous awareness
  • emphasizes that enlightenment is not just knowledge, but a state of consciousness
  • expresses the idea that ultimate liberation is to be fully absorbed in Krishna


In short

“Krishna Consciousness” means:

the cultivation of a continuous awareness of Krishna as the supreme reality and center of life

If you want, I can break down how this differs from other forms of “God-consciousness” in Christianity, Sufism, or Advaita Vedanta — they sound similar on the surface but define “awareness of the divine” in quite different ways.


Theistic idealism

 You’ve laid out a fairly classical theistic argument: “there must be an eternal ground of being, and that ground is conscious, therefore awareness is ultimately grounded in a conscious Absolute (Krishna).” That line of reasoning exists in several philosophical traditions, including parts of Vedanta and Christian scholasticism.

But there are a few important logical steps in what you wrote that are not actually settled just by the premises.


1) “Something must have always existed”

The intuition behind this is the principle of sufficient reason or the rejection of “absolute nothingness.”

However, in philosophy and physics this is not a proven necessity, but a debated assumption:

  • In cosmology, some models allow for a universe without a classical “beginning” in time (for example, quantum cosmology proposals where “time” itself emerges).
  • In metaphysics, “nothing” is not well-defined as a physical state, so “nothing produces nothing” may not straightforwardly apply outside classical intuition.

So your conclusion (“there must be an eternal something”) is one coherent philosophical position, but not the only logically consistent one.


2) “That eternal something must be conscious”

This is the more controversial step.

Even if we grant an eternal foundation, it does not automatically follow that it is:

  • personal
  • aware
  • intentional
  • intelligent

Alternatives proposed in philosophy include:

  • impersonal ground of being (e.g., Spinoza’s substance)
  • mathematical structure (some modern Platonist views)
  • impersonal quantum vacuum / laws of physics (in naturalistic metaphysics)

So “eternal” does not logically imply “conscious” — that is an additional metaphysical commitment, not a deduction.


3) Awareness and “illusion vs real”

Your framing:

“Either awareness is real or it’s an illusion.”

Most philosophical and neuroscientific positions reject that dichotomy as too sharp.

Even if consciousness is:

  • emergent from physical processes, or
  • dependent on brain activity,

it does not become “illusory” in the sense of being unreal — it would still be a real phenomenon, just not fundamental.

A more standard framing is:

  • Is consciousness fundamental? (idealism / Vedanta-style view)
  • Or emergent? (physicalism / neuroscience view)


4) About the Śrīmad Bhāgavatam claim

You’re accurately reflecting a theological reading within the Vaiṣṇava tradition, especially in texts like the Bhagavad Gita and the ŚrÄ«mad Bhāgavatam, where Krishna is identified as the ultimate source of reality.

But it’s important to separate:

  • Internal theological consistency (within that tradition, this conclusion follows)
  • Philosophical universality (whether it follows for anyone regardless of prior belief)

The Bhāgavatam is making a devotional-metaphysical claim, not a universally demonstrated conclusion in the philosophical sense.


Bottom line

Your reasoning is a version of theistic idealism:

Reality ultimately rests on a conscious, eternal foundation, which is identified as Krishna.

That is a coherent worldview within Vedanta and bhakti traditions — but it is not the only logically possible resolution to the “why is there something rather than nothing / what is consciousness” problem.

If you want, I can map how this exact argument is treated differently in:

  • Advaita Vedanta (non-personal Absolute)
  •  Nyaya (logical theism)
  •  Western cosmological arguments (Aquinas, Leibniz)
  •  modern philosophy of mind (emergentism vs panpsychism)

They each accept parts of your reasoning but diverge on the key step: whether the “ultimate something” must be personal consciousness.


K C plus

 Everything originates from something that is eternal because things cannot come from nothing.


If ever nothing were to have existed in the past, there would only ever be nothing. Since there is not nothing something must have always existed. That something is the origin of everything else that exists.


Either awareness is real, or it’s an illusion. If it’s real then it originates from whatever is eternal. If it’s an illusion there’s no point in discussing it.


So any discussion of awareness as a real phenomenon hinges on the ‘something that is the origin of everything else’ being aware. That ‘something……’ is more conveniently called the Absolute Truth. Srimad Bhagavatam is an 18,000 verse book, which identifies Sri Krishna as the Absolute Truth in the first text and then expands on that for the rest of the book.


SB 1.1.1 - O my Lord, Sri Krishna, son of Vasudeva, O all-pervading Personality of Godhead, I offer my respectful obeisances unto You. I meditate upon Lord Sri Krishna because He is the Absolute Truth and the primeval cause of all causes of the creation, sustenance and destruction of the manifested universes. He is directly and indirectly conscious of all manifestations, and He is independent because there is no other cause beyond Him.


Short version: Awareness exists because Krishna is aware.


Fix mind intellect on Krsna

 BG 12.8

Bhagavad Gita 12.8


Sanskrit (IAST):
mayy eva mana ādhatsva
mayi buddhiṁ niveśaya
nivasiį¹£yasi mayy eva
ata Å«rdhvaṁ na saṁśayaįø„


Translation:
“Fix your mind on Me alone; place your intellect in Me. Then you shall live in Me thereafter — of this there is no doubt.”


This verse is spoken by Krishna to Arjuna in the chapter on Bhakti Yoga (the Yoga of Devotion). It emphasizes wholehearted devotion — directing both emotion (mind) and understanding (intellect) toward the Divine.


Stuti by Shruti

 “Stuti by Shruti” is a traditional Sanskrit expression often used in Hindu philosophical and devotional contexts.

  • Stuti (स्तुति) means praise, hymn, or glorification.
  • Shruti (श्रुति) literally means “that which is heard” and refers to the revealed scriptures of the Vedic tradition—especially the Vedas and Upanishads.

So “Stuti by Shruti” means:

Praise of the Divine by the revealed scriptures themselves.

In many traditions—especially within Vedanta—this phrase points to passages where the Upanishads or Vedas glorify Brahman, Ishvara, or the ultimate reality.

In an Advaita context, it can also imply something deeper:

  • the scriptures are not merely praising a distant God,
  • they are pointing the seeker back toward their own true nature as pure awareness or Brahman.

Examples include mahavakyas (“great statements”) from the Upanishads such as:

  • “Tat Tvam Asi” — That Thou Art
  • “Aham Brahmasmi” — I am Brahman

These are considered not just philosophical ideas, but revelatory pointers intended to awaken self-recognition.