Monday, May 11, 2009

LIFE AND MAYA

After Death

As per my understanding there is nothing after death once a person closes his eyes from his life the whole system disintegrates into PANCHTATVA and there is nothing left after that as the whole energy is transformed into different energy.

For an example water in HOLY RIVER GANGES might be considered as holy but when it evaporates and becomes a part of the cloud and drops back to earth as rain no one can identify whether it is from some river or the foul smelling drain and even no one can be sure about where it will drop.

Once the energy is transformed (After Death) it is gone and then there are no chances of catching the same.

Best way is to consolidate your energy to an extent that you can become one of the regulators of nature whether your body is there or not.

It is not so easy to understand until you practice MEDITATION.

MAGIC OF MAYA

Most of the human beings are fools as they are always after MAYA (means- Money, Gold, Sexual desire, love, luxuries etc.) and most of the people think they are very important in there role as an employee, business man or business person, father, mother, Lover, Boyfriend etc. but they do not understand that if unfortunately they die out of an accident tomorrow the world will not change it will go on with its own pace with or without you. Most of the time things that you think as most important are least important or have zero impact on your eternal life. Most of us are trapped in this human cycle which makes us to grow from child, Reproduce, Become Older and die.

I will tell you ways to break this cycle and live after your death. Which I call as real Moksha.

Nothing after Death

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As per my understanding there is nothing after death once a person closes his eyes from his life the whole system disintegrates into PANCHTATVA and there is nothing left after that as the whole energy is transformed into different energy.
For an example water in HOLI RIVER GANGES might be considered as holy but when it evaporates and becomes a part of the cloud and drops back to earth as rain no one can identify whether it is from some river or the foul smelling drain and even no one can be sure about where it will drop.
Once the energy is transformed (After Death) it is gone and then there are no chances of catching the same.
Best way is to consolidate your energy to an extent that you can become one of the regulators of nature whether your body is there or not.
It is not so easy to understand until you practice MADITATION.

Nirvana Theory



The term nirvana is associated with both Hinduism, the oldest religion in the world, and Buddhism, its best known off-shoot. In both Hinduism and Buddhism, the word refers to a higher state of being, but the two religions view this state very differently. As it turns out, examining the distinction between the concepts of nirvana is an excellent way of understanding some of the major differences between the two religions.

Nirvana is mainly associated with Buddhism, which was born out of Hinduism in Asia back in the 5th century B.C. It began as a movement within Hinduism, based on the philosophy and life of a man named Siddhartha Gautama, and eventually diverged to form its own path.

Siddhartha Gautama, who later became the Buddha ("the awakened one"), was born to a rich, ruling family around 563 B.C. in what is now modern Nepal. According to Buddhist legend, he led a sheltered, pampered life for all of his childhood and well into his twenties.

As a young man, he began to question the spiritual worth of this luxurious life and decided to give up all his possessions and emotional attachments, including his wife and young son. He wanted to understand the true nature of life and saw all his attachments as distractions, in keeping with Hindu thought.

He became a shramana, a wandering, homeless ascetic dedicated to meditation. He hoped to find enlightenment by completely detaching himself from the world, swinging to the polar opposite of his earlier life. Over time, he removed himself farther and farther from the earthly world, to the point that he was close to starvation. But he still hadn't achieved enlightenment.

He decided that if he continued on that path, he would die without reaching any understanding, so he gave up the ascetic life and accepted a meal from a stranger. He decided to take the middle road, the life between the luxury he had known and the poverty he had known.

According to legend, soon after Siddhartha took this path, he finally achieved enlightenment. As he meditated under a tree, he saw all of his past lives, and then the past lives of others. Eventually he gained a perfect, omniscient knowledge of this world and the world beyond it.


In Buddhism, this state, which the Buddha couldn't relate in language, is called nirvana. The word is Sanskrit for "to extinguish." In this case, it means to extinguish ignorance, hatred and earthly suffering. The term is most closely associated with Buddhism, though it's applied to a similar concept in Hinduism (as we'll see later on).

By achieving nirvana, you can escape samsara, the cycle of reincarnation that characterizes both Hinduism and Buddhism. In each life, a soul is punished or rewarded based on its past actions, or karma, from the current life as well as earlier lives (which also include lives as animals). It's important to note that the law of karma isn't due to a god's judgment over a person's behavior; it's closer to Newtons law of motion -- every action has an equal and opposite reaction. It happens automatically, of its own accord.

When you achieve nirvana, you stop accumulating bad karma because you've transcended it. You spend the rest of your life and sometimes future lives "working off" the bad karma you've already accumulated.

Once you have fully escaped the karmic cycle, you achieve parinirvana -- final nirvana -- in the afterlife. As with Hindu nirvana, souls that have achieved parinirvana are free of the cycle of reincarnation. The Buddha never specified what parinirvana was like. In Buddhist thought, it is beyond normal human comprehension.



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