The video eloquently captures the paradox of the spiritual path, where the cessation of seeking becomes the ultimate discovery. It serves as a potent critique of the ego's tendency to turn enlightenment into just another future goal to be conquered.
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How a British Soldier Became Enlightened | Papaji本站添加:
Before the world knew him as Papaji.
>> From where >> [music] >> you, me, all the rest emerge from, I am that.
>> He was a British army officer.
Disciplined, [music] practical, living inside the machinery of colonial India.
Not a monk, not a wandering sadhu, a family man, wearing military uniform, following [music] orders, living an outwardly ordinary life.
And yet, behind that disciplined exterior, something inside him was burning uncontrollably.
An obsession.
Not with [music] power, not with success, with God.
More specifically, with Krishna. [music] >> I was a devotee of Krishna from childhood. So, that Krishna even was manifest [music] in in physical form. I could see with the senses. I could as I see other things. [music] So much attached.
>> The world would later know this man as Papaji, one of the great Advaita mystics of modern India.
But long [music] before seekers from around the world gathered in a small satsang room in Lucknow.
>> Then what are we doing here today?
To find out who you are.
>> Harivansh Lal Poonja was simply a man desperately searching for the divine.
Born in Punjab in 1910 into a deeply devotional family, Papaji was drawn towards [music] spirituality from childhood.
But unlike ordinary religious devotion, his longing carried an unusual intensity.
For him, Krishna was not mythology, not symbolism.
Krishna was alive, real, somewhere waiting to be found.
And as the years passed, this longing became almost unbearable.
Even while serving in the British Indian Army, even while managing family responsibilities and ordinary life, his inner world revolved entirely around Krishna.
He prayed constantly, chanted endlessly, meditated obsessively.
According to his own accounts, there were periods [music] when he repeated Krishna's name 50,000 times a day.
Imagine that.
A military officer outwardly functioning [music] in ordinary society, while inwardly consumed by divine obsession.
And then [music] one day, something happened that changed his life forever.
Papaji later described entering states of devotion so intense that Krishna began appearing before him directly.
>> I was a devotee of Krishna from childhood.
Devotee of Krishna, so that Krishna even was manifest in in physical form.
>> [music] >> I could see with the senses. I could as I see other thing.
So much attached. [music] >> Not as imagination, not as dreams, as living visions.
He said Krishna danced before him, spoke to him, filled him with ecstasy so overwhelming that ordinary reality itself [music] seemed to disappear.
For most people, such experiences would have ended the spiritual search forever.
But strangely for Papaji they only deepened [music] the mystery.
Because every vision eventually disappeared.
Every mystical experience faded.
And when it faded the same emptiness returned.
The same longing.
The same question.
What is permanent?
Then came one of the strangest incidents of all.
One night while Papaji was deeply immersed in prayer someone knocked at his door.
Assuming relatives had arrived unexpectedly he opened it casually.
But standing outside [music] according to Papaji's own account were not ordinary visitors.
He claimed he saw Lord Ram, Sita, Lakshman, and Hanuman standing before him.
Papaji himself later admitted this confused him deeply.
Because throughout his [music] life his devotion had been toward Krishna not Rama.
And yet here stood the figures of another divine tradition.
A virile silent radiant watching him.
Even stranger his wife reportedly could not see them at all.
To her there was nobody there.
Experiences like these shook Papaji profoundly.
And slowly [music] something unexpected began happening inside him.
His desire to continue spiritual practices >> [music] >> started disappearing.
The chanting stopped naturally.
Meditation stopped.
Even reading scriptures became [music] impossible.
Years later Papaji described this period [music] saying for 25 years I repeated Krishna's name.
[music] Then Rama, Sita, Lakshman, and Hanuman appeared before me.
After they left, I could not continue [music] my practice anymore.
This terrified him.
Because spirituality had been the center of his life.
And now suddenly, [music] even devotion itself was collapsing.
He became [music] deeply confused.
What was happening to him?
Had he fallen spiritually?
Had he lost [music] God completely?
Searching for answers, he traveled across India meeting saints, yogis, and spiritual teachers asking only one question, "Have you seen God?"
Many gave him teachings, rituals, philosophy, meditation [music] methods, but none satisfied him completely.
Then one day, [music] someone mentioned a silent sage living at the foot of Arunachala Mountain in South India, Ramana Maharshi. At first, Papaji was unimpressed.
After all, he had already seen Krishna, experienced [music] visions, entered ecstatic states of devotion.
What could some silent old sage [music] possibly offer beyond that?
Still, something pulled him toward Arunachala.
>> After spending some four [music] days in Adi Annamalai on the other side of the mountain, Arunachala, then Maharshi asked me asked [music] me where you had been. I said, "On the other side staying [music] by myself and playing with Krishna." Oh, she very good. You have been playing with Krishna?
>> [music] >> Yes, sir. I've been playing with Krishna. He's my friend.
Do you see him [music] now? No, sir. I don't.
So, he said what appears and disappears is not real.
>> [music] >> It's not real.
The seer remained. You saw him.
He disappeared. [music] You remain. Same seer. Now, you are here also. Seer [music] remained.
Now, find out who the seer is.
So, [music] it was a word only, no? It was a word. But, then it's it struck me.
I became [music] the seer, you see.
Some seer I saw.
>> When Papaji finally entered the hall where Ramana Maharshi sat, he immediately felt disturbed.
Because the moment he looked at Ramana, something strange happened inside him.
His thoughts slowed.
His spiritual excitement disappeared.
[music] A heavy silence filled the room.
Papaji did not like it.
Directly, he confronted Ramana Maharshi and asked, "Can you show me God?"
Ramana looked at him calmly and replied, "No.
I cannot show you God because God [music] is not an object to be seen."
Papaji became frustrated.
Another philosophical answer.
Another teacher avoiding the question.
Then Ramana [music] asked quietly, "Who is it that wants to see God?"
That single question shattered something inside [music] him.
Because for the first time, instead of searching outward, Papaji's attention turned inward toward the one searching itself.
Who wanted Krishna?
Who wanted >> [music] >> enlightenment?
Who was seeking?
And suddenly, the entire structure of seeking collapsed.
Years later, Papaji described it as if the seeker itself disappeared completely, leaving only silence, awareness, presence.
No visions, no mystical fireworks, no divine forms, just an overwhelming recognition that what he had been searching for had always been here.
>> At their own self, which is the fountain of the grace, of love, of beauty.
Here arises the love and peace also. I just point them out. Look within yourself for 1 second, and you will not search, not find. [music] You'll see that you are peace itself.
>> After meeting Ramana Maharshi, Papaji's life transformed completely.
Outwardly, he returned to ordinary life, worked, raised family, >> [music] >> lived simply.
But inwardly, something fundamental had ended.
The restless seeker was gone.
And perhaps what made Papaji different [music] from many spiritual teachers was this.
He had no patience for complicated spirituality anymore.
No interest [music] in endless rituals.
No fascination with mystical experiences.
No obsession with becoming [music] enlightened in the future.
Again and again, >> [music] >> he repeated the same radical message.
You are already free.
Not after years of meditation.
Not after spiritual perfection.
Not after enlightenment someday [music] in the future.
Right now.
For many seekers, this was both liberating and terrifying. [music] Because if freedom already exists now, then the entire [music] structure of seeking begins collapsing.
Years later, seekers from around the world travel to Lucknow [music] just to sit with him.
Artists, monks, therapists, spiritual seekers exhausted [music] from years of searching.
Many arrived expecting secret teachings or mystical practices.
Instead, Papaji often [music] laughed at spirituality itself.
Sometimes seekers proudly described [music] decades of meditation.
And Papaji would simply ask, "Who has been meditating?"
Again and again, he pulled attention back toward the root sense of identity itself. Not philosophy, not religion, direct recognition.
And perhaps the strangest thing about Papaji was how ordinary he appeared outwardly.
>> There's no object [music] in the mind, no person, no thing, no concept >> [music] >> that can return you happiness and peace of mind.
So, I just tell them, give them this information.
Don't look here, there, anywhere.
Peace is within you and within the heart of all beings.
So, you keep quiet.
Don't look anywhere.
Don't allow your mind to abide anywhere.
And you will see that it is peace, happiness itself. That is the fundamental truth.
And every being in the world is happiness itself.
>> He laughed loudly, told jokes, spoke casually. Nothing about him resembled the dramatic image of a traditional guru. And yet, people sitting near him often described entering profound silence without [music] explanation.
Because Papaji's real power was not mystical performance.
It was freedom.
The freedom of someone who had stopped searching completely.
>> More serious thing that one should for the seeker is to seek freedom alone.
Only freedom.
>> One day, a seeker asked him, "What should I do to become enlightened?"
Papaji laughed softly and [music] replied, "Stop being interested in becoming enlightened."
That was his teaching again and again.
The movement toward becoming is the trap itself.
Truth is not created through effort.
>> [music] >> It is what remains when effort ends completely.
Papaji left [music] the body in 1997, but even today, recordings of his talks continue spreading across the world.
His words still disturb seekers, still dissolve questions, still [music] challenge the mind's addiction to searching.
>> Now, I tell you and what is mind?
I I is mind.
Mind is past.
Clinging to past, present, future, clinging to time, clinging to objects is called mind.
Where does the mind arise from?
I single when you I arises, mind arises.
Mind arises, senses arises.
Senses arises, world arises.
Now, find out where does the I arise from?
Where does the I arises from?
And tell me if you are not quiet.
>> The British army officer who searched desperately [music] for Krishna until the seeker itself disappeared.
The mystic who discovered that even visions of God are temporary, but truth itself is beyond all appearances. And somewhere behind every spiritual search the laughter of Papaji still echoes softly.
You are already free.
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