Answers Come From A Quiet Mind
Q: Gurudev, please talk on the art of asking questions since, at times,
I am not satisfied with an answer I get, or I get more confused with
the answer.
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar: Meditation!
When the mind is restless, no matter what the answer is, it does not
get in. When your mind is quiet, just a sign is good enough and you will
pick up the answer, for you are the source of all answers. When you are
quiet, then, from within you the answers come up. That is why, a few
moments of relaxation is essential.
Whatever you tell a
restless person, he will say, ‘But’. You give them an answer, even then
they will say, ‘Okay! But…’, and then they go on changing the topics.
This is the sign of a mind which is so filled with ideas and concepts,
that there is no place for new wisdom or knowledge to enter in.
The same thing happened with a Master and a disciple.
A disciple came to a Master, and he was asking some questions,(a very
similar situation as you are in.) He was asking question after question,
but was not satisfied with any answer that the master gave. So, the
master said, ‘Okay, come! Let us have tea.’
The master asked, ‘You like tea?’
He said, ‘Yes.’
So the master started pouring tea in the cup of the disciple. The cup
got full but still he kept pouring. The tea overflowed from the cup and
spilled on the table, and the floor.
The student asked, ‘Master, why are you doing this? The cup is full. You can see the tea spilling all over the carpet!’
The Master smiled and said, ‘That is what the situation is. Your cup is
so full that it has no more space to take anymore, but you are wanting
more. First, empty your cup, drink what you have.’
The ancient
Rishis in the Vedas have said, ‘Shravana’, first listen, and then
‘Manana’, i.e., contemplate about it, or think about it. You listen to
an answer, and you think about it. Then make it your own. See if it is
in your own experience? Don’t believe anything because someone says it.
This is the basic thing that one has to remember.
My experience is
my own and your experience is your own. Don’t take anything just because
I am saying it. Simultaneously, don’t discard what anyone says; you
should be a good listener. First, listen, and then contemplate on it.
Then, make it your own experience. Then, that becomes wisdom. Knowledge
turns, and becomes wisdom – Shravana, Manana, Nidhidhyasa.
After speaking all the 700 verses of Gita, Lord Krishna says, ‘Look
Arjuna, I have said it all. You think about it. If you find it suitable,
take it.’
That is what needs to be given, freedom of thought,
freedom of opinion, freedom of belief and faith. You can’t force a thing
on everybody’s head. Faith has to be developed from within one’s self.
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