Friday, June 26, 2015

5 ways Arjuna can relate to you

Krishna's Mercy HOME › THE FIVE › FIVE WAYS THAT ARJUNA CAN RELATE TO YOU Five Ways That Arjuna Can Relate To You BY KRISHNASMERCY on JUNE 23, 2015 • ( 0 ) “Arjuna said, My dear Krishna, O infallible one, my illusion is now gone. I have regained my memory by Your mercy, and I am now firm and free from doubt and am prepared to act according to Your instructions.” (Bhagavad-gita, 18.73) Download this episode (right click and save) arjuna uvāca naṣṭo mohaḥ smṛtir labdhā tvat-prasādān mayācyuta sthito ‘smi gata-sandehaḥ kariṣye vacanaṁ tava In some ways life gets better as you get older. You supposedly have more freedom. If you’re out of pens at home, you can step in the car and drive over to the store. If you feel like pizza for dinner, you can make that desire a reality. Though the entire time, whether as a child or an adult, you’re under the strict laws of the material nature, it appears that in adulthood you have more control over the direction of your life. Four things are characteristic of a material existence: birth, old age, disease and death. We get this list from Vedic teachings but it’s obvious for anyone who is willing to look. Old age means the body starts to decay. Thus it becomes more susceptible to disease, which at that point has a greater chance of being fatal. As more time passes through life, the difficult moments start to accumulate. This is due to attachment. Whatever we are attached to will eventually leave us. In dealing with loss or a bewildering situation, it helps to consult someone who has experienced the same. For instance, if we lose a close family member to a disease, the initial moments of shock and despair are difficult. We look for others who have gone through a similar situation. There are the commonly uttered comforting words of “I know how you feel.” This statement can only be true if the person has indeed gone through the same struggles that we find ourselves in. Unfortunately, there are many bewildering situations in a material existence. For each one, we may not be able to find someone who knows how we feel. Fortunately, there is Vedic literature, which deals with both the theoretical and the practical. There is philosophy mixed in with historical accounts. From one character alone, we find a person who can relate to a lot of difficult situations in life. His name is Arjuna, and he plays a central role in the famous Bhagavad-gita, which is the song of God. 1. He lost a father at a young age. It is a great fortune to have loving parents at the time of birth. They are our only support system. So to lose one of them at any time in life is not easy. Arjuna’s family was known as the Pandavas, getting the name from their father Pandu. Arjuna and his four brothers lost the association of their father at a young age. They had to deal with a terrible loss. 2. He was attacked unfairly. We’ve surely been wronged at least once in our lives. The feeling is not good. Justice should prevail, but sometimes it doesn’t. Arjuna and his family suffered grave injustices. After Pandu’s passing, the brothers were subjected to torture from their cousins, known as the Kauravas. This family was led by Duryodhana, who tried to kill the Pandavas several times. Arjuna lived in a house that was set on fire once. He and his family fortunately escaped in time due to well-placed intelligence. The crown of Hastinapura rightfully belonged to the Pandavas, but Duryodhana would not give it up. 3. He had tremendous success. What need is there to relate to someone who is successful? Do not the spoils go to the victor? Actually, success can be more bewildering than loss. The reason is that happiness doesn’t come from material objects alone. Arjuna was so successful that one of his names was Dhananjaya. This name means “conqueror of wealth,” and it was used by Shri Krishna to address him many times. Arjuna one time brought a great amount of gold from a mountain range and gave it to his brother Yudhishthira. So Arjuna acquired tremendous wealth and then gave it all away, making him a conqueror over it. 4. He saw terrible things happen right in front of him. One doesn’t have to look far to find depressing images. They are shown on the nightly television newscasts. They are in the daily newspaper. A person who witnesses these events firsthand can get traumatized. Imagine, then, how Arjuna felt after the battle of Kurukshetra. He saw millions of people die, and he was not happy about it. Though his side won, he was not elated over the victory. He witnessed and caused tremendous bloodshed. 5. He was bewildered and needed help. The starting point of the Bhagavad-gita is Arjuna needing help. A great war is about to commence and oddly enough Arjuna is afraid of winning. He doesn’t want to see important people on the other side perish. There is the saying that he who hesitates is lost. Arjuna hesitated and he seemed lost. Everyone goes through this at some point, and with Arjuna the hesitation became logged in one of the most famous books of all time. The Conclusion As Arjuna can relate to so many different people, his example becomes all the more important. He went through so much but he maintained a level head due to his devotion to Krishna. When he was most bewildered he turned to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, who happened to be roaming the earth at the time as his cousin and dear friend. Arjuna received the science of self-realization directly from God and implemented the principles in his own life. As he can relate to us, Arjuna knows how we feel. He also knows the solution to the problems of material life: devotional service. By remaining in bhakti-yoga, he shows how the precious human life can mature to its destined fruition. In Closing: Tragedy in front of me to see, By life’s struggles bewildered to be. Best when someone to feel our pain, Since went through difficulties the same. From history Arjuna’s example to take, Study of his dealings with Krishna to make. Devotional service the answer to him, Over enemy of doubt to win. Share this: PrintEmailFacebook4TumblrTwitterGoogleReddit ‹ Sankirtana For The AgesFive Ways To Tell That The Bhagavad-gita Favors Personalism Over Impersonalism › Categories: the fiveTags: articles, bhagavad-gita, news, self-help RELATED ARTICLES Five Reasons Prahlada Is the Best Son You Could Ask For Five Ways To Tell That The Bhagavad-gita Favors Personalism Over Impersonalism Leave a Reply Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked * Name * Email * Website Comment You may use these HTML tags and attributes:
    



 Notify me of new comments via email.

 Notify me of new posts via email.

Membership

Please enter your email address to join our daily e-newsletter.





Top Rated

Growing Up A King’s Daughter
The One With The Indirect Praise
Where Do You Want To Live
The Benefits of Controlling the Mind
Without Envy
Variety In One
The One With All The Best Things
Lack of Inquisitiveness
The One With The Winter Storm
The One With The Team Captain
Random Posts

Click here for random post
Recent Posts

Five Reasons Prahlada Is the Best Son You Could Ask For
Five Ways To Tell That The Bhagavad-gita Favors Personalism Over Impersonalism
Five Ways That Arjuna Can Relate To You
Sankirtana For The Ages
Talking About Miracle Men
Understanding Pure Devotion
Writing Down To Remember
Talking About What God Must Be
Remembering From Where Your Power Comes
Caste Brahmanas
Brahmanas and Vaishnavas
The Value of Seeing
My Choice
Insulting Hari
Fire and Brimstone
Prabhupada Books




Most Viewed

Five Ways To Tell That The Bhagavad-gita Favors Personalism Over Impersonalism
Five Reasons Prahlada Is the Best Son You Could Ask For
Five Ways That Arjuna Can Relate To You
Why Do People Die
Talking About Miracle Men
Lord Krishna
Sankirtana For The Ages
Vishnu Worship
Understanding Pure Devotion
Known For Following Principles
Links

 Our Amazon Books
 Our Podcast
Facebook


RECENT COMMENTS

	Ashish Kumar on Understanding Pure Devotion
	Jigger on Writing Down To Remember
	joeythebuddhist on Brahmanas and Vaishnavas
	shambhu on Clearing Our Vision
	sunit kumar ghosh on Excusing Offenses Made Directl…
TRANSLATE

Translate this blog into different languages... 

Albanian Arabic Bulgarian Catalan Chinese Simplified Chinese Traditional Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician German Greek Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Indonesian Italian Japanese Korean Lativian Lithuanian Maltese Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Vietnamese
RECENT POSTS: BHAKTI POEMS

Against Time
Cold In The Summer
Let The Smile Deliver You
Easy To Lament
Even After Thousands of Years
POPULAR LINKS

krishnasmercy.podbean.com…
krishnastore.com/bhagavad…
krishnasmercy.podbean.com…
krishnasmercy.org/dotnetn…
krishnasmercy.files.wordp…
lh6.ggpht.com/_RWM6XqnZgi…
lh5.ggpht.com/_RWM6XqnZgi…
krishnasmercy.files.wordp…
krishnastore.com/science-…
bhaktipoems.com/2015/06/1…
CATEGORIES

bhagavad-gita (28)
bhagavan (39)
chaitanya (10)
chanting (38)
charity (11)
children (14)
conversations (60)
cows (2)
damodara (33)
deity worship (27)
devotional service (77)
disease (10)
diwali (6)
dohavali 1-40 (56)
dohavali 41-80 (59)
dussehra (6)
economy (3)
education (8)
equality (12)
false ego (2)
fame (2)
fear (5)
feature (40)
four regulative principles (16)
gaura purnima (7)
global warming (4)
glories of lakshmana (34)
glories of sita devi (72)
gopis (10)
govardhana (6)
government (26)
hanuman (2)
hanuman crossing the ocean (10)
hanuman describing rama (28)
hanuman entering ashoka (17)
hanuman entering lanka (30)
hanuman meets sita (26)
hanuman overcoming depression (35)
hanuman sowing dissension (11)
hanuman spotting sita (23)
hanuman spotting sita 2 (50)
hearing (23)
holi (6)
holiday (56)
honesty (3)
intoxication (4)
janaki mangala (261)
janmashtami (6)
karma (34)
kindness (3)
knowledge (28)
krishna pastimes (52)
krishna showing universal form (21)
kunjavihari (22)
lakshmana counselling rama (35)
liberation (4)
love (9)
maricha describing rama (11)
marriage (6)
mayavada (22)
meat eating (4)
meeting hanuman (21)
meeting shabari (8)
memory (9)
mercy (4)
mode of passion (10)
narasimha (8)
parents (2)
pilgrimage (6)
prasadam (14)
prayer (3)
preaching (28)
protecting the saints (15)
questions (28)
radha (5)
radhashtami (6)
rama navami (7)
ramayana (14)
ravana threatening sita (53)
ravana threatening sita 2 (24)
reading (19)
reflections (1)
regulative principles (3)
reincarnation (37)
religion (59)
renunciation (20)
sacrifice (9)
science (38)
searching for sita (26)
shikshashtakam (14)
shiva (2)
sita and hanuman (29)
sita describing her marriage (12)
sita identifying herself (20)
sita warning ravana (18)
spiritual master (36)
spotting hanuman (13)
stories (57)
sugriva praising hanuman (17)
tapasya (11)
the five (3)
the fruit vendor (12)
thinking (10)
time (1)
varnashrama dharma (9)
violence (4)
vishnu (6)
vyasa puja (6)
yoga (29)
POSTS BY DATE

June 2015
M	T	W	T	F	S	S
« May	 	 
1	2	3	4	5	6	7
8	9	10	11	12	13	14
15	16	17	18	19	20	21
22	23	24	25	26	27	28
29	30	 
NAVIGATION

Contact
Membership
Related
Worship
Lord Krishna
Lord Ramachandra
Lord Chaitanya
His Divine Grace A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
Goswami Tulsidas
Krishna Dwaipayana Vyasa
Maharishi Valmiki
Teachings
Beginning Steps
Prasadam
Chanting
The Four Regulative Principles
Deity Worship
Essentials
Book Recommendations
Science of Self Realization
Bhagavad-gita As It Is
Krishna Book
Shrimad Bhagavatam
Chaitanya Charitamrita
Songs
Shri Krishna Chaitanya – Hare Krishna
Namaste Narasimhaya
Jaya Sita Rama
ARCHIVE

June 2015 (25)
May 2015 (31)
April 2015 (30)
March 2015 (31)
February 2015 (28)
January 2015 (31)
December 2014 (32)
November 2014 (30)
October 2014 (31)
September 2014 (30)
August 2014 (31)
July 2014 (31)
June 2014 (30)
May 2014 (31)
April 2014 (30)
March 2014 (31)
February 2014 (28)
January 2014 (31)
December 2013 (31)
November 2013 (30)
October 2013 (31)
September 2013 (30)
August 2013 (31)
July 2013 (31)
June 2013 (30)
May 2013 (31)
April 2013 (30)
March 2013 (31)
February 2013 (28)
January 2013 (31)
December 2012 (31)
November 2012 (30)
October 2012 (31)
September 2012 (31)
August 2012 (31)
July 2012 (31)
June 2012 (30)
May 2012 (31)
April 2012 (30)
March 2012 (32)
February 2012 (29)
January 2012 (31)
December 2011 (31)
November 2011 (30)
October 2011 (31)
September 2011 (30)
August 2011 (31)
July 2011 (31)
June 2011 (30)
May 2011 (31)
April 2011 (30)
March 2011 (31)
February 2011 (28)
January 2011 (31)
December 2010 (31)
November 2010 (30)
October 2010 (31)
September 2010 (31)
August 2010 (30)
July 2010 (31)
June 2010 (30)
May 2010 (32)
April 2010 (30)
March 2010 (31)
February 2010 (28)
January 2010 (31)
December 2009 (31)
November 2009 (30)
October 2009 (31)
September 2009 (30)
August 2009 (31)
July 2009 (31)
June 2009 (13)
April 2009 (3)
March 2009 (4)
February 2009 (4)
BLOG AT WORDPRESS.COM. | THE OPTI THEME.

No comments:

Post a Comment