Sunday, July 29, 2012

Good eye for the sky....

Monsoons are round the corner. Once more sky will host an exhibition of numerous abstract art and paintings. I am ready to play the reporter :-)




Friday, July 27, 2012

Miksang @Workplace

Even my workplace is on move!




Sounds exciting, isn't it? But its just the campus move really. However it gave me a good reason to look at the place with a good contemplative eye for a while in order to come up with a photoblog dedicated to it. here is the link to the flickr slideshow...



Sunday, July 8, 2012

A Search in Secret India – Book Review


At last his lips open and he says gently:
“You say I. ‘I want to know.’ Tell me, who is that I?”
Puzzled, I point a finger towards myself and mention my name.
“And do you know him?”
“All my life!” I smile back to him.
“But that is only your body! Again I ask, ‘Who are you?’”
Excerpt from Paul Bruntun’s conversation with Maharishi

For westerners, India has always been the most sought after destination for seeking the spiritual. The mystical essence of India and far advanced exploration of consciousness has attracted many well known philosophers and high thinkers from all parts of west. When Paul Bruntun landed at Alexandra dock, Bombay, in early 1930s, he had a similar quest. But his intent differed in the sense that he not only wanted to seek the spiritual, but probe it as well.
This book is a search in secret India, secret in the sense that it examines India that had been hidden from the outer world for thousand of years. What resulted was a tale of remarkable spiritual adventure which Paul so elegantly chronicled in this book. The content of the book details his journeys to various corners of India in search of individuals with genuine spiritual insight. Amongst many people he came across, Paul describes some of the outstanding meetings in details. The book includes his interactions with yogis from north and south India, proclaimed sages and spiritual heads of various religions.
The remarkable thing about this book is the way these interactions have been presented to the reader. Being a thoroughbred journalist, Paul effectively uses his skills to probe the self proclamation of these sages and events with critical impartiality. However, he so efficiently succeeds in never judging an event and leaves it to the readers to take the final call.
Best travel stories are the ones which completes a circle and ends at home. Paul ultimately manages to get an end to his quest and find peace at Arunachala, with Sri Ramana Maharishi. The chapters which document his interactions with Maharishi are cult classics and cannot be justly praised in any reviews. This book holds the credit of enlightening the west about the teachings of Sri Ramana Maharishi. And its been widely known that the ideology highlighted in this book not only transformed Paul’s life forever, but have had similar influence on many others. Nearing the end of the book, Paul summarizes his experience from his journey, giving the book a superb metaphysical climax.
This book is a true travel classic and one of the greatest in the genre of spiritual travel.
Bye it, read it, absorb it and live it. This masterpiece by Paul explores infinite expenses of transcendental India that readers of any generation would find exciting to read.