OPAN-OTOL-MSOIA-BGMisms
Obs of a Prnnl Lrnr Obsrvr who happens to be a dctr There is no cure for curiosity-D Parker
Friday, 15 May 2026
Ma Sucah. Do not grieve worry despair
Bhagavad Gita 18.66 — Word-by-word Breakdown
sarva-dharmān parityajya
mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja
ahaṁ tvāṁ sarva-pāpebhyo
mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ
Line 1
- sarva — all
- dharmān — duties, laws, forms of righteousness, obligations (plural of dharma)
- parityajya — abandoning, renouncing completely
Together:
“Abandoning all dharmas/duties…”
Line 2
- mām — unto Me
- ekam — alone, only
- śaraṇam — refuge, shelter, protection
- vraja — go to, approach, take
Together:
“Take refuge in Me alone.”
Line 3
- aham — I
- tvām — you
- sarva — all
- pāpebhyaḥ — from sins, from evil consequences, from bondage caused by wrongdoing
Together:
“I shall free you from all sins/bondage…”
Line 4
- mokṣayiṣyāmi — I will liberate, release, free
- mā — do not
- śucaḥ — grieve, worry, despair
Together:
“Do not grieve/fear.”
Smooth Literal Rendering
“Abandoning all duties, take refuge in Me alone.
I shall liberate you from all sins; do not grieve.”
Notes on Key Words
Dharma (dharmān)
In the Bhagavad Gita, dharma can mean:
- duty
- righteousness
- moral order
- social/religious obligations
- one’s role in life
Different schools interpret this verse differently because dharma is such a deep term.
Śaraṇam
“Refuge” implies:
- surrender
- trust
- protection
- wholehearted reliance
This word is central in many devotional traditions.
Mokṣayiṣyāmi
From the root related to moksha (liberation):
- freedom from suffering
- freedom from karmic bondage
- spiritual liberation
If you’d like, I can also show:
- the grammar/case structure,
- the verse in Devanagari,
- pronunciation guidance,
- or compare how Adi Shankaracharya, Ramanuja, and Madhvacharya interpret it differently.
Zen 6
Impermanence
Suffering
Mindfulness Pay attention no judgment
Non attachment NORAD
Metta LKM May u b at peace
Beginner’s mind Let go of all stories
ET. Sense Essence Being Silence. GRF
What you’re touching is one of the most destabilizing human experiences: loss, and the awareness that loss is inevitable.
Eckhart Tolle often frames this through the idea that much of our suffering comes not only from what happens, but from the mind’s resistance to it — especially its attempt to escape the reality of impermanence. Whether or not you adopt his language of “presence” or “eternal dimension,” there’s a practical insight underneath it: grief becomes more overwhelming when we’re fighting the fact that it is happening.
That doesn’t mean “acceptance” in a passive or numb sense. It means something closer to allowing reality to be what it is without adding an extra layer of mental war on top of it.
When it’s the loss of someone you love
Grief doesn’t proceed in stages as neatly as people often say. It tends to move in waves: sometimes quiet, sometimes overwhelming, sometimes strangely absent for a while.
A few grounded things that actually help:
- Let the grief be physical, not just intellectual. It often shows up as pressure in the chest, fatigue, agitation, or emptiness. Trying to “think your way out” of it usually prolongs it.
- Stay connected to routine, even minimally. Sleep, food, and basic structure matter more than motivation during grief.
- Talk about the person in ordinary terms. Not only in “eulogies,” but in small memories. This helps the brain integrate the loss instead of freezing it as trauma.
- Avoid forcing closure. The mind often wants a clean emotional resolution. Grief rarely offers one.
If you resonate with Tolle’s angle, you might interpret moments of deep stillness or non-identification with thought as brief pauses where the loss is present, but not overwhelming the entire sense of self. But you don’t need a spiritual framework for that to be valid.
When it’s fear of your own death
Death anxiety often isn’t about death itself—it’s about:
- loss of control
- fear of non-experience
- unfinished life narratives
- or simply the mind hitting its limits
What tends to help more than reassurance is shifting the question slightly:
- Instead of “How do I stop fearing death?” → “What changes if I don’t negotiate with this fear every time it appears?”
Most people find that the fear comes in spikes, not continuously. It rises when the mind tries to fully picture the impossible (non-experience), then falls when attention returns to something immediate and sensory.
Practices that are actually useful here:
- Grounding in sensation: feeling feet, hands, temperature, sound—pulls attention out of abstract loops
- Short, honest acknowledgment: “This is the mind reacting to uncertainty” rather than arguing with it
- Meaning-based focus: not as a distraction, but as a choice about where to invest your limited attention while alive
A key distinction
There’s a difference between:
- feeling grief or fear fully, and
- being absorbed by the story about it
Tolle’s contribution is essentially pointing to that gap. Psychology would phrase it more as “decentering from thoughts.”
One important pushback
If any philosophy starts suggesting that you should transcend grief quickly, or that fear of death is a “problem to solve,” it can backfire. Grief is not a misunderstanding—it’s a reflection of attachment and love. The goal isn’t to erase it, but to stop adding unnecessary suffering on top of it.
If you want, you can tell me which part is most present for you right now—the loss itself, the fear of your own death, or something more specific about what’s been happening.
Bv Monkhouse one liners
Here are 20 Bob Monkhouse–style one-liners (kept in his clean, classic British observational/comedy style rather than exact quotes):
- “Age is merely mind over matter. If you don’t mind, it doesn’t matter.”
- “I’m not saying I’m old, but my birth certificate is in Roman numerals.”
- “I’ve got all the money I’ll ever need… if I die by 4 o’clock this afternoon.”
- “My wife says I never listen… or something like that.”
- “I told the doctor I broke my arm in two places. He told me to stop going to those places.”
- “I stayed up all night wondering where the sun went… then it dawned on me.”
- “I asked the librarian if the library had books on paranoia. She whispered, ‘They’re right behind you.’”
- “I used to think I was indecisive, but now I’m not so sure.”
- “I’m on a whisky diet. I’ve lost three days already.”
- “I bought a memory foam mattress… I can’t remember why I liked it.”
- “I told my wife she should embrace her mistakes. She gave me a hug.”
- “I’m not arguing, I’m just explaining why I’m right.”
- “I’ve started investing in stocks: beef, chicken, and vegetable.”
- “I tried to catch fog yesterday. Mist.”
- “I went to buy camouflage trousers, but I couldn’t find any.”
- “I’m reading a book on anti-gravity. It’s impossible to put down.”
- “I used to be a baker, but I couldn’t make enough dough.”
- “I’m in shape… round is a shape.”
- “I told my computer I needed a break, and now it won’t stop sending me KitKats.”
- “I’m not lazy, I’m on energy-saving mode.”
If you want, I can make them darker, more modern, or more like his actual stage patter (slightly punchier and more showbiz-style).
No judge. Put down the stone
Your only real business is the mastery of your own mind. When you stop trying to manage the world, you finally have the energy to manage yourself. Your body and mind thrive when they are at peace. And you cannot have peace while you are at war with the growth of others.