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Karma Yoga - Part 2 For Life & Spirtual Liberation
There is a story in the Ramayana, one of the great kings, Janaka, who
besides being a Rishi, was also a perfect Karma Yogi. The Ramayana is
one of the sacred epics of Hindu tradition and religion. This is a story of spiritual liberation for everyone. A Rishi is a wise and scholarly saint, who has attained all possible
knowledge in a certain area. King Janaka had attained this (and more)
as a perfect Karma Yogi was said to have also attained Moska, or liberation
from the cycle of birth and death. What is Karma Yoga? Karma Yoga, or the "discipline of action" is based on the
teachings of the Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad-Gita, the holiest of Hindu
scriptures. As one of the four pillars of yoga, Karma yoga requires
the adherence to one's duty (swadarma) while remaining detached from
the reward. Simply, It is the yoga of performance of "right action". What is right action? Right action is compliance with your Swadharma (personal right duty-action).
Thus each thing you do, is harmony with the Creator, Creation and your
purpose for life. We all know what we should be doing. It "feels"
correct. More specifically, and your life's work done must be without expectations,
motives, or anticipation of its outcome. Doing so, it purifies one's
mind and enables an individual to comprehend the wisdom is so doing. Why does Karma Yoga help? What can it do for you? Karma Yoga, practiced in daily life enables an individual worthy, through
action, meditation and devotion to develop the power of reasoning, develop
their intuitive power to acquiring knowledge and finally to transcend
the mind itself. What do I do next? You practice daily the 3 Ds
Devotion, Duty and Discipline. This
is the secret of performing Karma Yoga. Is gained through, if nothing else, understanding the magnitude and
greatness of the Creator's work. This is the first step to becoming
a Karma Yogi, and you cannot proceed without it. It never fails, even
just to glance at the heavens, and let one's mind wander, you will become
devoted. The more you reflect on creation, the more you are drawn to
the creator. Duty (swadharma). Often "duty" is referred to as "righteousness".
You will incur demerit if you shun your duty. In Karma Yoga, the whole
thing is about achieving merit, Your duty is towards God, or Self, or
the Inner Teacher who teaches you through all the specific circumstances
of your life as they appear. Karma Yoga teaches that God is the doer,
not you Discipline. Each work you do, each task is a sort of teacher or lesson.
You know you can learn different skills by doing different jobs. You also know that each job has different requirements in terms of
time, degrees of concentration, skills or experience, emotional input
and output, physical energy, and will. A Karma Yogi will do whatever job or task well, and in full compliance
according to your Swadharma. The message of Karma Yoga is this: When you do any action that is in harmony with the Creator and Creation,
you are never egotistically motivated. You also no longer maintain compulsive desires relative to the future.
With this eradication of compulsive desire, you are able to live in
the ever-present, with the understanding that present actions influence
the future, so you live without being bound to the future. It is a basic spiritual law that all desires carries within themself
the motive force for their fulfillment. That is, if an experience is possible to have in this natural world,
and we desire it, we are subconsciously pushed toward it or attract
it to ourselves. Spiritual liberation The adherence then, to correct action, through Karma Yoga can lead
then to our ultimate spiritual liberation. .
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