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Can One Meditate Full Time? - Part I
Natesa:
I
have
my
professional
work.
Yet
I
want
to
be
in
perpetual
meditation.
Will
they
conflict
with
each
other?
Maharshi:
There
will
be
no
conflict.
As
you
practice
both
and
develop
your
powers
you
will
be
able
to
attend
to
both.
Talks
30,
Page
37
Here
a
busy
man
with
a
unfulfilled
longing
to
devote
more
time
for
spiritual
practice
is
really
seeking
an
assurance
from
Ramana
that
his
professional
work
would
not
come
in
the
way
of
'sadhana'.
In
'Talks'
we
find
many
seekers
having
this
problem.
They
have
their
duties
to
discharge,
family
obligations,
daughter's
marriage,
son's
education,
and
the
like.
How
can
they
in
the
thick
of
all
this
really
find
even
a
little
time,
let
alone
a
lion's
share
of
available
time
for
spiritual
practice?
It
is
also
a
common
idea
that
work
and
meditation,
a
contemplative
way
of
life
and
life
in
the
world
are
an
either
or
proposition.
One finds it hard to get over the sub-conscious idea that they are alternatives, that all said and done one can pay attention to only one thing at a time. Time and again this doubt crops up. Paul Brunton found it difficult to accept the firm statement of Ramana that, given the right mental attitude one can hold on to the inner peace flowing from meditation not only a recluse in a jungle hermitage but also amidst the demands of a busy life in London.
We also find that some persons have a compelling urge to give themselves more completely to meditation by taking the plunge and opting for sanyasa. Natanananda did so notwithstanding repeated advice from Ramana not to do so. It is only later that he learnt that the ochre robe or white cloth made no difference to his sadhana. The example of Janaka, who 'fenced with two swords' of karma and jnana, and that of Chudala narrated in 'Yoga Vasista' are regarded as exceptions.
One has to have a close look at the assumptions underlying this approach. Duties are regarded as 'worldly', often to be performed because circumstances leave no choice. What is regarded as 'meditation' is the time set apart for spiritual practice. How valid are these distinctions? Are we right in regarding each as a separate water-tight compartment? Is each of them a full time job? Can one be totally absorbed in the supposed alternatives even assuming we decide to choose one exclusively?



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