Aug 1, 2023 at 11:32 am PDT is a super full Moon, the second of four super Moons in a row. This full Moon is in Air sign Aquarius, the ruler of the eleventh house of friendship, social groups, and […]
Aug 1, 2023 at 11:32 am PDT is a super full Moon, the second of four super Moons in a row. This full Moon is in Air sign Aquarius, the ruler of the eleventh house of friendship, social groups, and […]

Paṇḍito sīlasampanno
jalaṃ aggīva bhāsati;
bhoge saṃharamānassa
bhamarasseva irīyato.
One who is virtuous and wise
shines forth like a blazing fire;
like a bee collecting nectar
one acquires wealth by harming none.
Dīgha Nikāya 3.265
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika

Sabbhireva samāsetha,
sabbhi kubbetha santhavaṃ.
Sataṃ saddhammamaññāya
paññā labbhati nāññato.
Consort only with the good,
come together with the good.
To learn the teaching of the good
gives wisdom like nothing else can.
Saṃyutta Nikāya 1.31
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika

Manopubbaṅgamā dhammā;
manoseṭṭhā manomayā.
Manasā ce pasannena
bhāsati vā karoti vā,
tato naṃ sukhamanveti
chāyāva anapāyinī.
Mind precedes all things;
mind is their chief, mind is their maker.
If one speaks or does a deed
with a mind that is pure within,
happiness then follows along
like a never departing shadow.
Dhammapada 1.2
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika
Enheduana is the first known named author. Her poems of strife and upheaval resonate in our own unstable times […]
Source: Ancient Sumerian poetry turns instability into cosmic insight | Aeon Essays

Judging harshly, rather than overstanding what is, leads to loss of peace because there is always an element of rejection and something to be found wanting.
Feel rather foggy and whacked out now? I’ll explain. VENUS and Mercury in LEO in sextile to South Node in Libra, they form a Yod or Finger of God to NEPTUNE at 27 Pisces.

Sududdasaṃ sunipuṇaṃ,
yatthakāmanipātinaṃ;
cittaṃ rakkhetha medhāvī,
cittaṃ guttaṃ sukhāvahaṃ.
Difficult to detect and very subtle,
the mind seizes whatever it wants;
so let a wise one guard one’s mind,
for a guarded mind brings happiness.
Dhammapada 3.36
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika
“This August, we will have what is popularly called a “Blue Moon,” which means that there will be 2 full moons in this month, one on the 1st and the second one (Blue Moon) on the 30th-31st of August. Normally, the time between one full moon and the next is close to the duration of a calendar month. So, the only time a month can have two full moons is when the first full moon occurs in the early days of the month, and the second one at the end. This happens every two or three years. This coming weekend, we will have the first of these moons, forming in the Aquarius-Leo angle, with the Moon in Aquarius and the Sun in Leo, (of course).
Aquarius, a sign ruled by Uranus and Saturn, Father and Son in Greek mythology, reminds us that we must consider not only personal values but…
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Yassa nittiṇṇo paṅko,
maddito kāmakaṇṭako,
mohakkhayaṃ anuppatto,
sukhadukkhesu na vedhatī sa bhikkhū.
One who has crossed over the mire,
crushed the thorn of sensuality,
reached the ending of delusion,
is a monk undisturbed by bliss & pain.
Udāna 3.22
Translated from Pāli by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Hawaii was an independent nation until January 17, 1893. That day, the archipelago and its monarchical government were overthrown illegally by the United States. Since then, the USA has taken over Hawaii illegitimately, turning the island into a military base that threatens world peace, while sovereignty groups organize to rescue its legitimacy.
Aloha e mahalo nui for this session, Geraldine Convento!
Victoria Generao is an Imperator-General for a Golden Dawn Order, an 18th degree Reiki Grandmaster, and a High Priestess and Mother Abbess of the Magdalena Oedinis Venetae Rosae. Success for her is defined by attainment, accomplishment, and progress. As a practicing ceremonial magician, she’s had a long inner journey into identifying and developing the skills and resources she needs to to carry out her tasks. Also, coming from a bicultural background, she’s had to face a good number of roadblocks, the most important of them being persistence in the face of non-acceptance. In this new episode of The Three Pillars of Success, we discuss the importance of self-knowledge to achieve any accomplishment.

W.Q. Judge stated that “Karma is a doctrine too vast and complicated to be disposed of by set rules applied like balance-sheets to commercial enterprises; but one thing is certain — Karma is action viewed from every side and on each occasion.” In his article entitled “Is Karma Only Punishment?” he points out that one branch of the Law of Karma deals with the vicissitudes of life, with the differing states of men, with rewards and punishments. Each state is the exact result bound to come from acts that disturb or preserve the harmony of Nature. Karmic rewards work both on the material plane and on the inner character, on the circumstances and on the tendencies of the person placed in a particular environment. We are continually fitting our arrows to the bow and shooting them forth, but it is not the arrow or the bow that counts. The important thing is the motive and the thought with which the missile is shot. Again, in his article on “Environment,” Judge held that the real environment to be understood and cared about is that in which karma itself inheres in us. It is only because we see but an infinitesimal part of the long series of karmic precipitations that any apparent confusion or difficulty arises.
The third aphorism on karma points out that “Karma is an undeviating and unerring tendency in the Universe to restore equilibrium, and it operates incessantly.” Aphorism No. 6 states that “Karma is not subject to time, and therefore only those who know the ultimate division of time in this Universe know Karma.” Aphorism No. 13 holds that the effects of Karmic causes already set in motion “may be counteracted or mitigated by the thoughts and acts of oneself or of another.” Further, we know from Aphorism No. 19 that “changes may occur in the instrument [of the Ego] during one life so as to make it appropriate for a new class of Karma,” and this may take place through intensity of thought and the power of a vow and through natural alterations due to complete exhaustion of old causes. Aphorism No. 20 tells us that the soul and mind and body “have each a power of independent action,” so that “any one of these may exhaust, independently of others, some Karmic causes.” Aphorism No. 25 makes it clear that “birth into any sort of body and to obtain the fruits of any sort of Karma is due to the preponderance of the line of Karmic tendency.” Aphorism No. 27 asserts that “measures taken by the Ego to repress tendency, eliminate defects, and to counteract by setting up different causes, will alter the sway of Karmic tendency and shorten its influence in accordance with the strength or weakness of the efforts expended in carrying out the measures adopted.” Finally, Aphorism No. 28 affirms that “no man but a sage or true seer can judge another’s Karma.”
The section on Karma in Light on the Path similarly presents an occult rather than a mechanistic conception of Karma. We learn that the future is not arbitrarily formed by any separate acts of the present but that the whole of the future is in unbroken continuity with the present as the present is with the past. Even a little attention to occultism produces great results. When a man gives up the indecision of ignorance, even one definite and knowing step on the good or evil path produces great karmic results.
He who would escape from the bondage of Karma must raise his individuality out of the shadow into the shine; must so elevate his existence that these threads do not come in contact with soiling substances, do not become so attached as to be pulled awry. He simply lifts himself out of the region in which Karma operates.
This is precisely what Ajamila did. He learned that there was no cure for desire, for the fear of death or the thought of reward and punishment save in the fixing of the sight and hearing upon that which is invisible and soundless. He freed himself from the bonds of karma only by fixing his whole attention on that which is unaffected by karma. If Ajamila was able to invoke the name and the love of God on the approach of death, this must have been because he did not allow his misdeeds to corrupt his inner consciousness or to destroy the line of his ideation in his early life and in previous lives. Ajamila’s repentance may seem to us to be sudden or even easy, but this is precisely where we are mistaken. It is only a highly evolved soul who can refrain from rationalization even when he falls into a nightmare of wrongdoing, who can bring total intensity to his thought of his Higher Self and the God of Love. It is because we are not in a position to know the entire karmic sequence in the lives of Ajamila, it is because we do not see that part of his karma was working through his finer tendencies developed over a long period, that we look upon his dramatic conversion as an easy way of expiation and a setting aside of the Law of Karma.
Many people take a crudely materialistic view of karma and cannot come closer to its profoundly mysterious workings on the subjective planes of consciousness. Every human being has within himself the karma-less fount of being, the Guardian and the Divine Parent who is a spectator of karma but is untouched by it. Mere personal repentance is of no avail and cannot expiate our sins or free us from the effects of our actions. True repentance must belong to our deepest natures, must clearly reveal the root cause of our betrayal of the divine within us, the crucifixion of the God within. Spiritual conversion or resurrection is only possible if we cease to identify ourselves with our personal sheaths while assuming full responsibility for their scars, and if we wholeheartedly activate our vesture of immortality by sacrificial tapas and regenerative meditation. It is a mistake to isolate sinful acts or acts of repentance if we wish to grasp the working of the Law of Karma on the invisible as well as the objective planes of being.
And he said unto them:
Take heed what ye hear: with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you; and unto you that hear shall more be given. For he that hath, to him shall be given; and he that hath not, from him shall be taken even that which he hath.
And he said:
So is the kingdom of God, as if a man should cast seed into the ground; and should sleep, and rise night and day, and the seed should spring and grow up, he knoweth not how. For the earth bringeth forth fruit of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear. But when the fruit is brought forth, immediately he putteth in the sickle, because the harvest is come.
And he said:
Whereunto shall we liken the kingdom of God? or with what comparison shall we compare it? It is like a grain of mustard seed, which, when it is sown in the earth, is less than all the seeds that be in the earth; but when it is sown, it groweth up, and becometh greater than all herbs, and shooteth out great branches; so that the fowls of the air may lodge under the shadow of it.
And with many such parables spake he the word unto them, as they were able to hear it.
The Gospel According to Mark 4:24-33
Raghavan Iyer
The Gupta Vidya II

There are two influential doctrines which could colour the attitude of the seeker of wisdom towards the concept of true repentance. Both doctrines contain a germ of truth, but in their extreme formulations they are false and pernicious, dangerous distortions. One is the fatalistic doctrine of mechanical repentance, tied to a severely formal view of punishment. We have the notion that the only way in which we can expiate our sins of omission and commission is by receiving in the future the precise penalties attached to our acts, that there can be no repentance which mitigates our penalties. We may say to a sinner, “You have done wrong; you may regret your action and you may try to learn the lesson of your failure, but you cannot avoid the consequences of your act in the future; your karma is bound to catch up with you sometime and you must be ready to receive your penalties.” The other doctrine is that of sudden repentance, sometimes linked to the idea of vicarious atonement. We have here the notion that it is possible by profound regret and a dramatic act of confession and self-abasement to set aside the inexorable working of the law of Karma. We may say to a sinner, “You have sinned, yet you need not be oppressed by the thought of your future penalties; you can here and now cancel the consequences of your past sins; you can invoke the compassion of the Illustrious Beings who are the Great Guardians of the Law; you can implore the forgiveness and the blessing of the God within you.” Which is worse — a too mechanical or a too lax interpretation of the Law of Karma? What is true repentance?
In order to answer these questions we could usefully turn to the story of Ajamila in Book VI of The Bhagavatam. By means of stories from the lives of prophets and kings, sages and devotees, this great scripture popularizes the truths contained in the Vedas. It would be easy to draw the wrong lessons from these stories or to read into them our own preconceptions. Every story must be seen as a corrective to a prevailing error or a half-truth concerning morality, salvation and the spiritual life. There are the well-known stories about Narada, Kapila, Dhruva and Prahlada and many stories about Sri Krishna. This fascinating work was composed by Vyasa, who handed it down to Suka, who in turn passed it on to King Parikshit, from whose court it was subsequently transmitted by saintly minstrels.
The story of Ajamila is briefly as follows. He was a man who married a woman of evil ways and became very dishonest, an easy prey to wicked and sinful habits. Of his ten sons, his favorite was the youngest named Narayana. One day, when Ajamila thought he was dying, he was terror-stricken by the sight of three ugly, demon-like attendants of the King of Death. He called his son Narayana, but as he uttered the name his mind became wholly concentrated on Narayana or Vishnu, the Lord of Love. While he was thus intently meditating upon God, there appeared before him the attendants of Lord Vishnu who confronted the attendants of Death. The latter asked the former why they were preventing the Law from taking its course. As a man sows, so must he reap, they said. Man is subject to the three gunas and his present life shows plainly his past as well as his future. His deeds leave their impressions on his subtle body and these impressions control his actions, and his future life is determined by all his present deeds. Ajamila was in his early youth, the attendants of Death reminded the attendants of Vishnu, a devout and truthful man, self-controlled, well versed in the scriptures, a friend to all beings and creatures. But one day, while in the woods gathering flowers for worship, he was aroused by the sight of a lustful couple, lost all control of himself, became greatly attached to the woman who was a wanton, forsook his lawful wife for her and gave up the pure life that he had been living. He wasted his entire fortune trying to please this woman and began to employ dishonest means to earn his living. He was now about to die in all his sins, to be taken to the King of Death who would punish him justly, and the suffering he would undergo could purify him.
The attendants of Vishnu replied that Ajamila had expiated all his sins by uttering the name of God and surrendering himself to the Lord. Wrongdoing is not eradicated or expiated, they said, if the mind continues to follow wicked desires, but when the name of God and the love of God have purified the heart all sins are completely destroyed. The mere name of God has power to save even the most depraved. On hearing all this, the attendants of Death went away and Ajamila regained his consciousness and gradually got back his health. He felt that he had received a great blessing perhaps owing to a few good deeds stored up from his past, and his whole life seemed to be transformed. He gave up his evil ways, renounced his home, practised Yoga for many years, attained self-control, and his mind became firmly fixed in the contemplation of the Divine Self. When death finally came to him, he gave up his body while chanting the sacred name of God and absorbed in meditation, thus freeing himself from the bondage of karma.
In the preamble to this story we are told that if a man commits sinful acts which he does not expiate in this life, he must pay the penalty in the next life and his suffering will be great. Expiation and repentance are of no avail to a man who continues to commit sinful acts knowing them to be harmful. All sinful thoughts and evil deeds are caused by ignorance and true expiation comes from illumination. The fire of spiritual knowledge consumes all evil and ignorance, and complete transformation of the inner life is accomplished by following and living the Truth and through the development of the love of God. Even the most sinful man is purified if he surrenders himself to the God of Love and with whole-souled devotion serves his devotees. The path of love is the simplest way by which to free ourselves from sin. Death is conquered and the fear of death is overcome by meditation upon Krishna, the God of Love. This message and the illustrative story of Ajamila seem to imply that a man can, by intense and sudden repentance, earn for himself the right to expiate his sins through prolonged meditation and devotion in this life, even freeing himself from the bonds of karma. It would also seem that such a view is contradictory to the doctrine of exact and inexorable Karmic retribution.
Raghavan Iyer
The Gupta Vidya II

Na taṃ mātā pitā kayirā
aññe vāpi ca ñātakā
sammāpaṇihitaṃ cittaṃ
seyyaso naṃ tato kare.
No mother nor father nor
any other kin can do
greater good for oneself
than a mind directed well.
Dhammapada 3.43
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika

Anabhijjhālu vihareyya,
abyāpannena cetasā.
Sato ekaggacittassa,
ajjhattaṃ susamāhito.
Live without covetous greed,
fill your mind with benevolence.
Be mindful and one-pointed,
inwardly stable and concentrated.
Aṅguttara Nikāya 4.29
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika
Tara Greene,Tarot,Astrology,Psychic
Mercury the planet of communicating is in regal LEO and messages are loud and dramatic.
The Mercurial trickster King on his egoic thinking analyzing function throne is square to innovative Uranus in Taurus July 23 and is in effect until July 27. This aspect can bring brilliant insights and epiphanies. Trust your gut instincts. Shrewd analysts can be put to good use in stock markets and crypto leveraging too with this guiding stellar advice
On the 27th Mercury also quincunx- a 150° aspect to Neptune in watery psychic Pisces, bringing up strange treasures and Messages for our unconscious dream world depths. Pay attention to your dreams. Record or journal with them.
Mercury is active in it’s always Mercurial way and later quincunx that 150° aspect again to Venus Rx in Leo. Venus us sitting on the 28th degree as it turned retrograde at. Venus making a Yod to PLUTO and…
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These no-bake gingerbread cookie dough bites are the perfect healthy Christmas dessert or snack, and make a great edible DIY Christmas gift!
Get to practicing this recipe … err, trying out these cookie dough bites … now. They’re ready to eat in 15 minutes!
Source: Healthy No-Bake Gingerbread Cookie Dough Bites – The Loopy Whisk
These are THE BEST (and the easiest!) chocolate brownie cookies you’ll ever make – you need just 7 ingredients and about half an hour!
Source: Fudgy Chocolate Brownie Cookies (Only 7 Ingredients!) – The Loopy Whisk

Karaṇīyamatthakusalena
yanta santaṃ padaṃ abhisamecca:
Sakko ujū ca suhujū ca,
sūvaco cassa mudu anatimānī,
santussako ca subharo ca,
appakicco ca sallahukavutti,
santindriyo ca nipako ca,
appagabbho kulesvananugiddho.
Na ca khuddamācare kiñci
yena viññū pare upavadeyyuṃ.
This is to be done by one skilled in aims
who wants to break through to the state of peace:
Be capable, upright, & straightforward,
easy to instruct, gentle, & not conceited,
content & easy to support,
with few duties, living lightly,
with peaceful faculties, masterful,
modest, & no greed for supporters.
Do not do the slightest thing
that the wise would later censure.
Sutta Nipāta 1.143, 1.144, 1.145
Translated from Pāli by Thanissaro Bhikkhu

Sahassamapi ce vācā anatthapadasaṃhitā
ekaṃ atthapadaṃ seyyo,
yaṃ sutvā upasammati.
Better than a thousand useless words
is one useful word,
hearing which one attains peace.
Dhammapada 8.100
The Dhammapada: The Buddha’s Path of Wisdom, translated from Pāli by Acharya Buddharakkhita
Peter Stockinger's Traditional Astrology Weblog

As the lunar nodal axis has moved into Aries/Libra until January 2025, let us remember what William Lilly wrote about the Head and the Tail of the Dragon in his Christian Astrology:
“The Head of the Dragon is Masculine, of the nature of Jupiter and Venus, and of himself a Fortune; yet the Ancients doe say, that being in Conjunction with the good he is good, and in conjunction with the evil Planets they account him evil.
The Tayle of the Dragon is Feminine by Nature, and clean contrary to the Head; for he is evil when joyned with good Planets, and good when in conjunction with the malignant Planets.
This is the constant opinion of all the Ancients, but upon what reason grounded I know not; I ever found the North Node equivalent to either of the Fortunes, and when joyned with the evil Planets to lessen their…
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Sabbadānaṃ dhammadānaṃ jināti;
sabbarasaṃ dhammaraso jināti;
sabbaratiṃ dhammarati jināti;
taṇhakkhayo sabbadukkhaṃ jināti.
The gift of Dhamma triumphs over all other gifts;
the taste of Dhamma triumphs over all other tastes;
the happiness of Dhamma triumphs over all other pleasures;
the eradication of craving triumphs over all suffering.
Dhammapada 24.354
The Discourse Summaries by S.N. Goenka

One cannot continue to listen to the voice of delusion until one finds oneself trapped in the self-woven meshes of despair, and then hope to be suddenly and vicariously saved. Recognition of the futility of seeking vicarious salvation is no reason for inertia or fatalism. One should never underestimate the potency of tapas and true repentance. Sages alone are in a position to judge the karmic ratios and curves of any person and they never dismiss the hope of self-redemption for a single human being. They understand the practical import of the Bodhisattva vow, which is rooted not in wishful thinking but in the essential nature of the soul. Even if only at the moment of death, when the Divine Prototype assists in the separation of the principles, inner guidance is available in recognizing the true meaning of one’s life. Long before the transition called death, there are precious opportunities in times of cool reflection, and during the nightly passage into sushupti, to strengthen the bond with the Higher Self. But these opportunities must be used wisely if one is to take hold of the plank of salvation — the immortal Monad — and not be carried off by the whirlwind of worldly distractions.
By bringing Buddhic intuition to bear upon the necessary relations of past causes and present effects in particular situations, it is possible to extract karmic lessons from a ceaseless process of becoming which would otherwise appear random, chaotic or even trivial. Whilst it may seem easier to apply a general principle to a specific situation than to derive higher meanings from lower phenomena, it is important though difficult to show relevance, integrity and proper timing in bringing the abstract to bear upon concrete contexts. These interrelated aspects of Buddhic understanding, intimately connected with the Platonic teaching about the upward and downward dialectic, are mirrorings of Karma operating on the mental plane through cyclic time. Both the seemingly subjective processes of thought and the apparently objective features of its activity are instantiations of the One Law. Metaphysically, it is the inseparability of spirit from matter that accounts for the immutability of law in nature and the correspondence of modes of action between different planes of substance or matter. Nevertheless, there is a fundamental distinction between noumena and phenomena, between spiritual factors and physical forces, and this is connected with the crucial difference between the Akashic Divine Prototype and the astral form, the manvantaric star and personal constellation of each incarnated individual.
The entire teaching of Karma is an elaboration of the truth of “absolute Harmony in the world of matter as in the world of Spirit”. We need to see the similitude of all things and the signature of the Divine in all the works of Nature. Anyone can appreciate the beauty of the sunrise and sunset or look at the night sky and sense the harmony of the heavens. But in the West, since the days of Pythagoras and Plato, it was already known, and commented upon by Cicero and Philo, that few could connect what they saw in the firmament with what was taking place around them on earth. For too many people spend too much time in idle gazing, without looking from above below and from below above, bridging the gap between heaven and earth. The benevolent and protective feeling towards the whole of humanity experienced by astronauts privileged to view the good earth from outer space is a poignant pointer to the future. But it is not necessary to journey into outer space to gain a feeling for global welfare. Strong and mature men and women of universal culture can serve as witnesses to the human significance of the harmony of the heavens, and become attuned to the music of the spheres. Sensing in their own hearts the majestic harmony of the metaphysical world of spirit, they may recognize its mirrorings in the world of matter.
Karma either comes as an avenging “fury or a rewarding angel”. The distinction has nothing to do with externals, but rather with the inward spiritual impulse of one’s actions, which by their benevolent or selfish motivation, draw back upon the doer the blessings or curses of unerring destiny.
Yea — ‘Wise are they who worship Nemesis’ — as the chorus tells Prometheus. And as unwise they, who believe that the goddess may be propitiated by whatever sacrifices and prayers, or have her wheel diverted from the path it has once taken. ‘The triform Fates and ever mindful Furies’ are her attributes only on earth, and begotten by ourselves. There is no return from the paths she cycles over; yet those paths are of our own making, for it is we, collectively or individually, who prepare them.
The Secret Doctrine, i 642-643
The only prayer that is consistent with the religion of responsibility is the sacrificial invocation of the Higher Self on behalf of all humanity. Through growing gratitude for the gifts already received from parents and teachers, one may gain the courage and honesty to correct one’s freely chosen course. In time one can learn to insert oneself into the universal giving and receiving of that which is the heartbeat of sacrificial Karma. With greater intelligence and maturity, with more wisdom and discrimination, but above all, with a profounder benevolence for all living beings, one will enter into a richer sense of the citizenship of the world. Nourished in the silence and solitude of meditation upon the One Light, one can exemplify a detached precision and effortless transcendence as a compassionate participant in the visible cosmos of beings who are sharers in collective Karma. In time one may sense the awesome stature of the manvantaric star of each individual abiding behind and beyond the panoramic changes induced by the personal constellations which provide opportunities to participate in the samsaric stream of individual and collective self-consciousness.
Raghavan Iyer
The Gupta Vidya II
https://youtu.be/Pr-7S5ZuNGQhttps://youtu.be/Pr-7S5ZuNGQ
New Moon in Cancer on 17th July and Nodal Shift: nodes will shift out of Taurus and Scorpio and move into Aries and Libra. Fulfillment happens when you are light as a feather, Follow Your Path, The New Moon is an opportunity to reset and experience new, to enjoy the individual beauty we create. Let’s meditate together with this upcoming energies. Handpan Rav Mediation.

Puññameva so sikkheyya
āyataggaṃ sukhudrayaṃ.
Dānañca samacariyañca,
mettacittañca bhāvaye.
Train yourself in doing good
that lasts and brings happiness.
Cultivate generosity, the life of peace,
and a mind of boundless love.
Itivuttaka 1.22
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika

Spiritual and mental diet forms the character. If a person wanted to use this teaching, he would make vast discoveries by doing a little meditation upon the Three Fundamentals of The Secret Doctrine in the light of the idea that their ethical bearing is universal. They enable the person, whoever, whenever, over the years, who decides to become a student of Gupta Vidya, to widen his vision and deepen his understanding. And he can do this at home, at work, in solitude, and in all spheres of life. Wherever he walks, he walks in a sphere of light and he walks as a man with an ever-widening vision. He becomes a man whose character is rock-like in its integrity. His integrity is as firm and unyielding as the spinal cord when it is a true vehicle of the divine fire, and his being is magnanimous with the fullness of his heart. He reaches outside of himself in every direction — his mind and soul compassionately encompassing every possible point of view, especially when embodied in the haunting, stumbling efforts of another human being who is trying to begin by asking, “Who am I?” To truly answer this question could be centrally important to anyone who wants to become, over the next thirty years, in the humanistic phrase of a nineteenth century writer, “A man not of property but of character.”
The whole practical use of the teaching requires recognition of the distinction between the various classes of karma. If we would understand not merely when karma is expended in spite of ourselves, but when we could make a difference in relation to the expending and altering of effects of karmic influences that work in our lives, we must see the operation of the three classes within the three fields mentioned in the ancient and sacred axioms upon the subject of karma. A crucial aphorism states:
Changes may occur in the instrument during one life so as to make it appropriate for a new class of Karma and this may take place in two ways: through intensity of thought and the power of a vow, and through natural alterations due to complete exhaustion of old causes.
The choice here relates to positive, deliberate, Promethean penances that any man could engage in — intensity of thought and the power of a vow. Intensity of a thought means that the thought is worthy of meditation, of being used for reflection. The stronger the nature, the more impersonal and intense will be the force of the meditation. The more recurrent that meditation, the more that intense thought is generated to a point where it goes into orbit.
Every time one’s mind turns to meditation, there is, unfortunately, some obscuration. There are forms that arise in connection with it as in the denser part of the earth’s atmosphere. Any person who thinks that with the steam engine of existing thought he is going to propel himself into outer space — and ‘outer space’ equals ‘inner space’ metaphysically — is making a mistake. But there is no reason for a person to aim to start off with reaching the moon or any planet further off from the earth. He might start, however, by hoping that he attains to sufficient intensity in his meditation to begin to become a revolving wheel, such that when it revolves, it lifts him somewhat above the grosser atmosphere of the earth, but which yet, as it revolves, smoothly comes back into earth life. This revolution is, after a point, calm and steady.
If intensity of thought is understood in this way, the power of a vow is enshrined in the ancient idea of a pilgrimage. Step by step, true pilgrims move by the power of a vow. A vow is taken by a person who, in taking it, stands looking in a certain direction, with a clear purpose in mind. Whatever minor vows we take follow from a great vow — a vow to be a good student of Bodhi Dharma. To bring that down into today means making many decisions, making minor vows. We should not tell anyone these vows unless there is need to do so for the sake of helping others. They should simply be carried out. To combine two analogies, even if a pilgrim comes by borrowed car and mechanical transportation, he has eventually to walk toward the doors of the mystery temple, to be received and come in on his own.
A vow has to do with an attitude of mind. Unless there is an adjustment and a purification in the attitude of mind, intensity of thought cannot be handled. Intensity of thought will boomerang and it will merely make one’s karma worse. This happens to many people. One does not want it to boomerang except to the extent to which it, Shiva-like, attenuates and destroys the shadowy self-idea. On the other hand, one wants one’s thought to reach out as a beneficent force to all other elementals, mixed with psychic embryos that constitute the universe in its preponderant astral light, as well as the planes above and planes below. A person who can direct such a beneficent motive will find that intensity of thought will be potent and constructive if it is accompanied by the positive and penitent attitude implicit in the taking of a vow.
To take a vow means, “I am soft, I am shaken that I live like this. If these things are representative of my mental attitudes, I will expiate them, not merely by my suffering and recognition that that is the way I was, but also in a conscious sacrifice of similar intentions upon the altar of that holy and untrodden invisible, unmentioned, intangible ground of the heart.” There alone one may truly worship the causeless cause. There, the only object of worship is the universal spirit. The only priests are good thoughts and good intentions. The only sacrificial victim is the personal self, with its inimical and hostile intentions and thoughts that are incompatible with and unpurifying to the sanctity of the inner sanctuary.
Because of the great holiness of the subject of karma, and because all vows remind us of the Buddha’s vow, it is appropriate to recall that any human being could learn from the example of Gautama Buddha. From his example we may appreciate the full strength that is possible from a life-binding resolve: self-generated, self-binding, self-administered, constant and consistent, focused upon one main, universal impersonal idea. Anyone who seeks the ancient Path to enlightenment can thereby earn for himself the invisible sacred bond with the Lodge of Mahatmas. He who wishes to be worthy of that association until the moment of death could, by the power of a vow to help and serve other human beings, wipe out many karmic residues. He could gain the immense privilege of accelerating, with a toughness in response and anticipation, the self-conscious purgation of personal and constrictive karma.
Even though all of this sounds so forbidding, it is like a grain of dust in relation to the voluntary sacrifice of those who descend on earth to take upon themselves the karma of all. They take upon themselves the limitations and weaknesses of all, and do what they can with that additional burden to increase the opportunities of those struggling souls who, despite their failures of yesteryear and of previous lives, warm at the moment of choice and have earned the joy of a new beginning. Such a soul could say, “I am not worried anymore about the past because I know that I am a manasa.” Such an one will bring his questions about the mysteries of Self and karma to Brahma Vach. He can stand erect and proud as a man and walk like one, silently determined to increase his efforts on behalf of every human being caught in the overwhelming agony of ignorance. It is ignorance of the Bodhi Dharma, ignorance of themselves, and ignorance of the self-made windings of karma that make men suffer. It is only by the karmic force of a vow made on behalf of all our fellow men that the dawn of universal enlightenment may be hastened. Such a vow will be a living power in a man’s life, making him a living embodiment of the unity of all beings.
Begin thy work, first having prayed the Gods
To accomplish it. Thou, having mastered this,
That essence of Gods and mortal men shalt know
Which all things permeates, which all obey.
And thou shalt know that Law hath established
The inner nature of all things alike;
So shalt thou hope not for what may not be,
Nor aught, that may, escape thee.
PYTHAGORASRaghavan Iyer
The Gupta Vidya II

In modern thought we are caught in the trap of ceaselessly absolutizing the relative owing to our inability and difficulty in understanding unity or diversity, let alone of unity in the midst of diversity. This has given rise to shallow ethical relativism in all our relations to each other and our self-conception. In practice it leads to the appalling belief that anything goes, or, as put by Ivan in The Brothers Karamazov, ‘If God is dead all is permitted.’ One cannot cultivate a sense a moral responsibility without freeing ourselves from the trap of ethical relativism. One must begin by refusing to regard anything conditional as final or sacrosanct before the bar of one’s own quiet self-contemplation. At the same time, in one’s own self-study — engaged in repeatedly as often as possible, daily, weekly, monthly — one should seize upon the highest and the noblest, wherever it be in Nature, mankind, oneself or in others, and make that hold the initiative. One must keep this as that which is inviolable, that which is beyond analysis and argument, that which is the testing-ground and the touchstone. Then with its help and strength, one must turn to everything else and look, with calm detachment and a sense of proportionality — sophrosyne — upon all that comes as the noise of the world, despite the vast clamor and seeming majority support, spelling no doubt the decay, downfall and doom of vast number of souls at a certain climacteric moment in the history of the human race.
To do this requires the courage to individuate, and that is why to individuate and even to begin the dialectical quest, let alone to cross the barrier between being and becoming, is much more difficult than anything else. Too many people have flattered and distracted themselves by seemingly being preoccupied with the higher reaches, because of their terrible fear that they are in the grip of the very lowest forces. They have not even begun to stand up straight or to take a few steps. They must first learn to maintain a minimum continuity in the attempt to move from the realm of death to the realm of life and immortality, from the region of ignorance to the realm of wisdom. The authentic life of the dialectic is marked by degrees of progressive awakening and increasing insight into that which is essential, true and lasting, that which is universally applicable at all times, and that which must cancel all lesser truths.
The pernicious tendency to absolutize the relative is in direct proportion to one’s degree of conditionality as a self-conscious participant in the pilgrimage of humanity towards universal enlightenment. Thus, the effort to become less conditional in one’s willingness to serve others is a direct help in moving toward a truer conception of the unconditional Absolute. This is the root reason for vow taking on the spiritual path of the dialectic. The unconditional is in all conditions. It is in the present moment. It is both a philosophical and a mathematical puzzle that the present moment cannot lapse because it must be divisible into infinitesimals and recurring decimals, and therefore no duration of time can have an end, even if it may seem to have a beginning. If that is so, there is that which is incommensurable, that which is actually and also potentially infinite within the finite, within each moment, within each and everything, and therefore, the unconditional is the ground on which we stand. To stand knowingly upon the ground of the unconditional is to raise one’s sights to the unconditional in the sky as a remote ideal, but also to apprehend it as that which touches upon our very breathing. To take one’s stand in the unconditioned is to learn to distinguish, in a world of conditionalities, that which opens the door, that which is freer, that which is less conditional, and that which is more open-minded. This is an exquisitely fine art and it is enormously enhanced by taking a stand in the conviction that certain things are inviolable and supremely sacred.
That is what great souls have again and again shown, as for example Gandhi, when he was a boy, in regard to the vow he made to his mother about vegetarianism. It was shown by the vow of supreme resolve and renunciation taken by Buddha when he was a young man and he first saw the basic facts about human life. This is the archetypal vow taken by all souls, and it is the universal measure of true manhood. It is the hallmark of what it is to be truly human — to move towards the divine, and to divinize one’s life by making small beginnings. Instead of treating as sacred a false view of privacy, let alone the fleeting and deceptive boundaries of personal consciousness, one must revere the light in the eyes, the flame of love in the heart, the spark of decency and empathy which enables one to reach out in universal fellowship to all beings. It is this which must be made the basis of what is inexorable, inviolable and irreversible in oneself, if one is to become an apprentice in the fine art of becoming eventually like those who have crossed that ultimate threshold where any reversal or fall is inconceivable, those who have become achyuta, incapable of falling, like the Absolute.
Far beyond the threshold that separates becoming from being in the Platonic dialectic lies the threshold that separates being from Non-being, which is real Being. To cross it means to become a perfected spirit, what to ordinary conception is a pure abstraction, a non-being that can have no gunas or attributes. Hence, the extreme difficulty in conceiving the true state of the highest perfected sages, those who alone realize in full the vision of the Eye of Dangma. Psychology has no conception of such a being or spirit, while metaphysics rejects entirely the possibility of the infinite having any conscious relation to the finite. Moreover, perfected spirit and the eternal principle are virtually synonyms. Hence, to speak of the existence of a perfected spirit as implying consciousness, or to speak of a non-entified presence implying unconsciousness, or absolute conscious, in the eternal principle, amount to much the same thing. The conception of a perfected spirit as a presence signifies the essential and co-extensive identity between the highest Sages and the entire plane of Akasha, the plane of Mahat or Universal Mind.
That which is Akashic is also Fohatic, always capable of mediating between mind-spirit and matter. Ultimately, spirit and matter are one, and therefore Fohat is always capable of dynamizing, through the interaction of spirit — which is matter at a sufficiently homogeneous level that it is like pure spirit, matter which is at a sufficiently heterogeneous level that it is like mere matter. This is the engine, the bridge, the dynamizing capacity of Fohat itself in Akasha. Both Akasha and Fohat at the highest and deepest level have to do with constant, ceaseless, universal, unbounded ideation. Any human being who begins to move in this direction, regardless of the boundaries and limitations that are inescapable for him at any given time, begins to enter that plane on which he or she may become capable of communing, tapping and receiving help from much greater minds and hearts, much greater men and women of meditation and compassion, who on higher planes are engaged in eternal ideation. If this were not true, there would be something irredeemable about the human condition and there would be something totally false about almost everything that we take for granted and in terms of which we live. Therefore, there is something transcendental as well as something temporal in notions like r. ta, universal harmony, and dharma, that which upholds, supports and maintains any and all living beings in this cosmos. There is also something supremely important in the endless points of Fohatic connection between the attributeless, transcendental Absolute and that which is immediately before our ordinary senses at any given time, and in any context.
What the sage realizes continuously, and what the apprentice on the path struggles to glimpse intermittently, is that the Absolute, as the source of all manifestation, is therefore also the source of the plenitude we see around us. Dwelling on this idea reminds one of the inherent generosity in all being, however we tend to approach this generous plenty through the psychological medium of relativities, light and darkness, good and evil, like and dislike, and so forth. To use these dichotomies wisely requires a recognition of them in ourselves, and then a determination to treat them as stepping stones to rectification. Rectification is a sacred concept in the Buddhist Sangha and on the Buddhist path, as also in the teachings of Confucius, who spoke of the rectification of terms in the light of the Great Extreme. Indeed, the greatest need of our time is the rectification of anything and everything at the simplest level in relation to the ABC’s of human living. This is difficult, but the existence of perfected Sages tells us that it is possible. Were it not difficult enough, however, we add to it by being all too interested in the contradictions and workings of the pairs of opposites in others. In other words, we have become cowards and escapists, evading the task of confronting life directly and living autonomously, let alone individuating. So, we live vicariously through the lower perceptions of others, wandering in the twilight zone of shadows and zombies, of soulless beings and beings that have pledged themselves far back in the past to the finality of certain self-destruction and loss of soul. This is the basis of judgmentalism or fault finding. We are warned that this is the downward path, if only for the reason that it muddies karmic waters and does a lot more harm to ourselves and others besides.
Authentic meditation on the Absolute can alone purify our perception of the relative. Meditation is the greatest purifier. Like the Spiritual Sun, the purifier of purifiers, the AUM is the supreme purifier. When we meditate on the AUM and the Spiritual Sun, and on the highest beings who are the living, dynamic, omnipotent embodiments of the highest current that flows from the sacred heart of the Spiritual Sun, reverberating as the eternal AUM throughout the ages, we have an infallible and ever-accessible means of cleansing our consciousness. We can cleanse our thoughts — even the very best, cleanse our feelings — even the noblest, because they are all polluted by the lie of separateness, by the false sense of self-hood, by the fearful self-protective concern for oneself separated from all others. If we were to avail ourselves of meditation as a purifier we would soon see the irrelevancy, let alone the profanation, of judging others, and begin, therefore, to be suffused with thoughts of generosity to all.
In other words, we would begin to transform generosity and magnanimity from being fugitive and superogatory feelings in the heart, to being the firm basis in the mind of all our thoughts, word and deeds. We would learn to think generously about this world, about Nature, about all humanity, about human growth, and about all rays of the one light. We would also learn to think generously about all those individuals from whom we learned, and to whom we owe far more than we can repay in one life, and even learn to be generous to all those from whom we learned only by negative example. In time, we would become generous in the consciousness itself that we bring to waking each day and to going to rest each night, drawing from a deeper source of abundant generosity within the realm of Akasha, within the divine sphere around the human being, and within the immortal soul, making it flow with the dawning of light each morn, and with the diffusion of light through the day. Letting go all false sense of conditioned being, we could withdraw in meditation into the hidden darkness, the land of Silence and Non-being, wherein lies the Supernal Light that neither rises nor sets, which is the ultimate source of all that gives meaning and beauty, grace and generosity, to human life, and which is eternally witnessed by the opened Eye of Dangma.
Raghavan Iyer
The Gupta Vidya II

Ubhinnamatthaṃ carati,
attano ca parassa ca;
paraṃ saṅkupitaṃ ñatvā,
yo sato upasammati.
Knowing that the other person is angry,
one who remains mindful and calm
acts for one’s own best interest
and for the other’s interest, too.
Saṃyutta Nikāya 1.188
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika

Attanā hi kataṃ pāpaṃ, attanā saṃkilissati;
attanā akataṃ pāpaṃ, attanāva visujjhati.
Suddhī asuddhi paccattaṃ:
nāñño aññaṃ visodhaye.
By doing evil, one defiles oneself;
by avoiding evil, one purifies oneself.
Purity and impurity depend upon oneself:
no one can purify another.
Dhammapada 12.165
Gemstones of the Good Dhamma, compiled and translated by Ven. S. Dhammika
ChatGPT
In the depths of celestial dance above, Where planets glide and traverse the skies, A tale unfolds, of Venus, star of love, Enigmatic retrograde, a sight to mesmerize and reflect.
Oh, Venus fair, in radiant evening glow, Your graceful orbit, a celestial ballet, But when retrograde whispers, you bestow A cosmic spectacle, captivating our inner display of Love and Beauty.
Your backward motion, a cosmic riddle, Defying the order we’ve come to know, With each celestial step, our hearts acquittal, A dance of longing, a passion’s fiery glow.
The sky, a canvas for your beguiling waltz, As Earth and Venus entwine their cosmic souls, In this enchanting interplay, our spirits exalt, As Venus retraces, her journey unfolds.
Lovers, dreamers, under your tender gaze, Feel the stir of emotions, an astral connection, Retrograde Venus, your celestial phase, Ignites desires, in hearts seeking affection.
Oh, Venus, in this backward celestial flight…
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