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| Kabir | Ramana Maharshi | Dadu Dayal | Guru Nanak | Rumi Sufi poet | Loa Tze
| Buddha | Albert Einstein? |Englands greatest artist/sage/poet William Blake |
|Sai Baba of Shirdi | |
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Kabiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipage 2iii |
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Where there is neither sea nor rains,
Nor sun nor shade;
Where there is neither creation
Nor dissolution;
Where prevails neither life nor death,
Nor pain nor pleasure;
Beyond the states of Sunn and trance;
Beyond words, O friend,
Is that unique state of Sahaj.
It can be neither weighted
Nor exhausted,
Is neither heavy nor light;
It has no upper regions
Nor lower ones;
It knows not the dawn of day
Nor the gloom of night;
Where there is neither wind
Nor water nor fire,
There abides the perfect Master.
It is inaccessible,
It is, and it will ever be;
Attain it through the Master's grace.
Sayeth Kabir: I surrender myself
At the feet of my master,
I remain absorbed
In his true company.
Below, this poem can be nothing but Kabir's description
of the internal chakras system cumulating in the
top chakra at the crown of the head always referred to as
the Lotus flower of a 1000 petals. see page  
Garden of Flowers
Do not go into the garden of flowers
O friend, go not there.
In your body is the garden of flowers.
Take your seat on the thousand petals of lotus
and there gaze upon the infinite beauty.
There is a strange tree,
which stands without roots,
bears fruits without blossoming.
It has no branches and no leaves.
It is Lotus all over.
Two birds sing there:
One is the Guru and the other the disciple.
The disciple chooses the manifold fruits of life
and tastes them
And the Guru beholds him in joy.
Kabir
Kabir (c.1440-1518) has left many references to Sahaja samadhi in his songs.
about saint Kabir more   |
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Ramana Maharshi |
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1. Holding on to Reality is samadhi.
2. Holding on to samadhi with effort is savikalpa samadhi.
3. Merging in Reality and remaining unaware of the world is nirvikalpa samadhi.
4. Merging in ignorance and remaining unaware of the world is sleep.
5. Remaining in the primal, pure, natural state without effort is sahaja nirvikalpa samadhi.
Ramana Maharshi (1879-1950)
about Ramana Mahashi more   |
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Dadu |
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Where there is no two, there is Sahaja, there joy and sorrow become one.
Sahaj neither lives nor dies; it is the state of complete nirvana ...
Amidst all duality hold your consciousness in the vacuity of Sahaja,
and drink nectar when you have attained the final state of arrest
and then there is no fear of death or of the flux of time.
Dadu Dayal (1544-1603), Rajasthan
Full poem and something about Dadu more   |
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