The blind dog comes to the fair

Ever feel like you’re running in circles, chasing things that look amazing but leave you feeling empty? 🐕🎪

Over 400 years ago, the legendary saint-poet Purandara Dasa wrote a masterclass in spiritual psychology using a stark, unforgettable metaphor: a blind dog wandering aimlessly into a chaotic village fair.

From treating sacred wisdom as mere “quotable quotes” to chasing fleeting illusions, this timeless piece, Kurudu Naayi Santege Bantante is a brilliant mirror for the human condition in material life.

Read this fresh English poetic adaptation and deep-dive explanation to discover why we get lost in the marketplace of life, and how to find our way back. 👇

#Philosophy #Spirituality #PurandaraDasa #IndianHeritage #PoetryOfLife

“Kurudu Naayi Santege Bantante” (ಕುರುಡು ನಾಯಿ ಸಂತೆಗೆ ಬಂತಂತೆ), composed by the 16th-century saint-poet Purandara Dasa, is a masterpiece. This piece of writing is inspired by Purandara Dasa’s great timeless song. I can’t describe in words how much I love this song.

The Blind Dog at the Fair

A blind dog wandered to the bustling fair, they say,

With sightless eyes and aimless paws, it stumbled on its way.

It knew not rules of traffic, nor where the paths aligned,

And plunged into the chaos, completely lost and blind.

Around it bloomed a riot of colors, vibrant, loud, and bright,

A grand kaleidoscope of life, hidden from its sight:

Mounds of golden turmeric, near heaps of scarlet spice,

Shining jars of liquid ghee, and sacks of polished rice.

Bright banners waved from canvas tents, trinkets caught the sun,

While sweetmeats fried, bubbling, enticing everyone.

Baskets filled with heavy fruits, and garments dyed in blue;

A dazzling sea of worldly wealth, fully out of view.

And through the crowd, the jugglers toss’d rings of painted wood,

While clever, dark-eyed magicians spun illusions where they stood.

With sleight of hand, they turned, stone into silver coin,

Inviting passing, hollow minds to marvel and to join.

The ragged buskers beat their drums and piped on hollow reeds,

Singing songs of fleeting joy to feed people’s greed.

A dancer spun in frantic steps, a puppeter held its string;

A thousand mock distractions in a loud, enchanted ring.

It spurned the trays of honeyed sweets and platters piled high,

To chew upon a broken bone, splintered, sharp, and dry.

Driven by a hungry belly, searching for a scrap,

It walked into a bustling store, right into a trap.

One vendor kicked it from the front, another struck its side,

With nowhere left to turn or run, and nowhere left to hide.

It yelped in pain but did not leave, sniffing for a bone,

Receiving blows of heavy sticks, and bruised by every stone.

For just a taste of garbage, it endured the market’s wrath,

Forgetting there was freedom outside that crowded path.

Such is fate of the mortal man who walks this earthly stage,

He enters into Samsara, a blinding, chaotic cage.

Through countless cycles, endless births, across a weary span,

It passed a million lifetimes just to win the form of man.

Yet blessed with rare human life, a prize beyond compare,

Squander’d; wandering, trapped in despair.

From garden unto garden, grove to grove, blindly runs,

And through the trackless forests, chasing shadows in the sun.

Bound tightly to its wife and child with fierce, attached embrace,

It anchored all its happiness within a changing face;

But when the hour of parting struck and swept them all away,

It stood alone in emptiness, with not a soul to stay.

It read the sacred Vedic texts just to quotable quote,

And left the inner wisdom, a lesson learned by rote.

Blinded it lost its way, despite the sacred lore,

And walked directly to the gates of Yamaraja’s door.

The priceless jewels of divine grace placed within its hand,

Yet like a clueless monkey, scattered in the sand.

And all this happened, all this grief, this tragic, blinding fall,

Because the foolish, wandering soul forgot the Lord of all.

It clean forgot sweet Krishna’s name, forgot Sri Ranga’s grace,

And turned its back on Vitthala to run this worldly race.

Ignorant of the spirit, blind to God’s design,

To chase the worthless dust of earth, rejecting the Divine.

To take the blows of fate and time, but crawl back for more,

Lured by the cheap illusions of the marketplace’s store.

Oh Purandara Vittala, hear a humble soul’s entreat

Guide me away from the market, back to Your lotus feet.

Purandara Dasa is known for using raw, everyday street imagery to convey profound Vedantic philosophy. In this song, he uses a biting, tragicomic allegory, a blind dog causing chaos at a village fair, to deliver a wake-up call to humanity about the nature of material existence.

I cannot ever do justice to his brilliance myself. But I can try to convey my appreciation for his deep devotion to Krishna and compassion upon souls like me.

1. The Blind Dog and the Fair

The core of the song rests on two brilliant metaphors:

  • The Blind Dog (Kurudu Naayi): Represents the spirit soul (Jivatma). It is “blind” because it lacks spiritual wisdom. It is driven entirely by its base, animalistic instincts… hunger, survival, and immediate sensory gratification.
  • The Market/Fair (Sante): Represents the material world (Samsara). A traditional Indian village market is temporary, loud, chaotic, and crowded. It sets up shop for a day and vanishes overnight, mirroring the fleeting, impermanent nature of worldly life.

When the blind dog stumbles into this chaotic marketplace, it has no map, no vision, and no understanding of how the market works. Similarly, souls plunge into the material world completely ignorant of our true purpose, navigating life purely by trial and error, mostly error.

2. Themes and Spiritual Lessons

The Illusion of Material Wealth (Maya)

The song describes the fair as incredibly vibrant, think piles of golden turmeric, scarlet spices, bubbling sweetmeats, jugglers, magicians, and buskers.

Samsara is not a boring wasteland, the material realm is dangerous precisely because it is so dazzling. The magicians and jugglers represent Maya (cosmic illusion). They perform tricks, turning stones into coins, symbolizing how the material world tricks us into believing that temporary worldly pleasures are permanent and valuable.

daivī hy eṣā guṇamayī mama māyā duratyayā / mām eva ye prapadyante māyām etāṁ taranti te

Translation: “This divine energy of Mine, consisting of the three modes of material nature, is difficult to overcome. But those who have surrendered unto Me can easily cross beyond it.”

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/7/14

The Misplaced Appetite (The Broken Bone)

One of the most poignant psychological observations in the song is the dog rejecting trays of honeyed sweets to chew on a dry, splintered, broken bone.

When a dog chews a dry bone, the sharp edges cut its own gums. The dog tastes its own blood but mistakenly believes the taste is coming from the bone. Purandara Dasa uses this to describe human desire: we reject the “honeyed sweet” of spiritual freedom and instead chase material pleasures that actively bind and hurt us, foolishly bleeding for joys that are entirely self-inflicted.

viṣayā vinivartante nirāhārasya dehinaḥ / rasa-varjaṁ raso ’py asya paraṁ dṛṣṭvā nivartate

Translation: “The embodied soul may be restricted from sense enjoyment, though the taste for sense objects remains. But, ceasing such engagements by experiencing a higher taste, he is fixed in consciousness.”

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/2/59

The Tragedy of Wasted Human Birth

Human life is incredibly rare, earned only after evolving through millions of lower lifetimes (as insects, birds, and animals).

Purandara Dasa laments that after finally achieving this precious human form, the soul wastes it. Instead of seeking Krishna, it walks “from garden to garden, forest to forest”, aimlessly wandering through the thickets of worldly distractions, entirely forgetting its own spiritual identity as an associate of God.

The Illusion of Temporary Relationships

The song sharply tackles human attachment (Moha). The soul binds itself fiercely to a spouse and children, building its entire universe around them. However, Purandara Dasa delivers a sobering truth: when the time of death arrives, the soul is ripped away from this environment. It enters the world alone, and it leaves the world alone. In the final hour, all worldly attachments are snatched away, leaving the soul to face its karmic accounts alone.

The Failure of Empty Intellectualism

Purandara Dasa was highly critical of ritualism and bookish knowledge devoid of true devotion (Bhakti). He notes that the soul might memorize and study all the Vedic texts, but if it lacks inner truth and humility, it will still lose its way. Intellectual pride only blinds the soul further, leading it straight to the gates of Yamaraja (the demigod in charge of Death and Judgment) to face inevitable punishment.

Lord Sri Krishna ridicules those who use the Vedas merely for temporary material gain or prestige (the “flowery words” or “quotable quotes”) rather than realizing that the ultimate purpose of all Vedic study is to know Krishna and serve Him.

yām imāṁ puṣpitāṁ vācaṁ pravadanty avipaścitaḥ / veda-vāda-ratāḥ pārtha nānyad astīti vādinaḥ

Translation: “People of small knowledge are very much attached to the flowery words of the Vedas, which recommend various fruitive activities… They say that there is nothing more than this.”

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/2/42-43

The Monkey and the Jewels

The poet uses a famous Kannada phrase, mangana kaiyalli manikyavante (like a precious gemstone in the hands of a monkey). A monkey has no concept of the value of a gemstone; it may simply play with it for a bit, surely get bored, and drop it in the sand somewhere. Divine grace, human consciousness, and the opportunity for spiritual perfection are the “priceless jewels” given to us, which many of us foolishly throw away to chase the worthless dust of material accumulation.

The Root Cause and the Remedy

Ultimately, Purandara Dasa asks: Why does the soul suffer like a stray dog being kicked from one market stall to the next?

The answer is simple: It forgot. It forgot the name of Krishna, it forgot the grace of Sri Ranga (Krishna), and it turned its back on our best friend and well-wisher, Krishna. The continuous “kicks and blows” we receive from fate, time, illness, and heartbreak are the natural consequences of wandering through the marketplace of Samsara unguided.

ye hi saṁsparśa-jā bhogā duḥkha-yonaya eva te / ādy-antavantaḥ kaunteya na teṣu ramate budhaḥ

Translation: “An intelligent person does not take part in the sources of misery, which are due to contact with the material senses. O son of Kuntī, such pleasures have a beginning and an end, and so the wise man does not delight in them.”

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/5/22

The wise person walks away from the market stalls of illusion, while the “blind dog” stays and helplessly takes the blows.

The song concludes not in despair, but with the classic signature (Ankita Mudra) of the poet. The only way out of the chaotic, abusive market of materialistic life is to stop chasing the scraps of the world, surrender the false ego, and find permanent refuge at the lotus feet of Purandara Vitthala (Krishna).

sarva-dharmān parityajya mām ekaṁ śaraṇaṁ vraja / ahaṁ tvāṁ sarva-pāpebhyo mokṣayiṣyāmi mā śucaḥ

Translation: “Abandon all varieties of religion and just surrender unto Me. I shall deliver you from all sinful reactions. Do not fear.”

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/18/66

I like this song because the song really sings my story, and likely yours. Fortunately for me, my master has already searched out and found me, has claimed me, and by his torchlight of knowledge, my blindness is disappearing rapidly.

This song gives me great hope. I know am on my way back home. Won’t you come with me?

Hear this song in Kannada.

Kannada lyrics and lyrics in latin scripts with diacritics below, with gratitude to Smt. Meera Subbarao. Especially in the original lyrics of the great Purandara Dasa, they have a haunting melody and reminder that stays long after we’ve heard it just once.

Original Lyrics

ಕುರುಡು ನಾಯಿ ಸಂತೆಗೆ ಬಂತಂತೆ || PA ||
ಅದು ಯಾತಕೆ (ಯಾಕೆ) ಬಂತೋ || A PA ||

ಖಂಡ ಸಕ್ಕರೆ ಹಿತವಿಲ್ಲವಂತೆ ಖಂಡ ಎಲುಬು ಕಡಿದಿತಂತೆ
ಹೆಂಡಿರ ಮಕ್ಕಳ ನೆಚ್ಚಿತಂತೆ ಕೊಂಡು ಹೋಗುವಾಗ ಯಾರಿಲ್ಲವಂತೆ || 1 ||

ಭರದಿ ಅಂಗಡಿ ಹೊಕ್ಕಿತಂತೆ ತಿರುವಿ ದೊಣ್ಣೆಲಿ ಇಕ್ಕಿದರಂತೆ
ಮರೆತರಿನ್ನು ವ್ಯರ್ಥವಂತೆ ನರಕದೊಳಗೆ ಬಿದ್ದಿತಂತೆ || 2 ||

ವೇದಶಾಸ್ತ್ರವನೋದಿತಂತೆ ಗಾದೆಯ ಮಾಡಿ ಬಿಟ್ಟಿತಂತೆ
ಹಾದಿ ತಪ್ಪಿ ನಡೆದು ಯಮನ ಬಾಧೆಗೆ ತಾ ಗುರಿಯಾಯಿತಂತೆ || 3 ||

ನಾನಾ ಜನ್ಮವನೆತ್ತಿತಂತೆ ಮಾನವನಾಗಿ ಹುಟ್ಟಿತಂತೆ
ಕಾನನಕಾನನ ತಿರುಗಿತಂತೆ ತಾನು ತನ್ನನೆ ಮರೆಯಿತಂತೆ || 4 ||

ಮಂಗನ ಕೈಯ ಮಾಣಿಕ್ಯದಂತೆ ಹಾಂಗೂ ಹೀಂಗೂ ಕಳೆದೀತಂತೆ
ರಂಗವಿಠಲನ ಮರೆತಿತಂತೆ ಭಂಗ ಬಹಳ ಪಟ್ಟಿತಂತೆ || 5 ||

kuruḍu nāyi santege bantante || PA ||

adu yāke bantō || A PA ||

khaṇḍa sakkare hitavillavante khaṇḍa elubu kaḍiditante

heṇḍira makkaḷa neccitante koṇḍu hōguvāga yārillavante || 1 ||

bharadi aṅgaḍi hokkitante tiruvi doṇṇeli ikkidarante

maretarinnu vyarthavante narakadoḷage bidditante || 2 ||

vēdaśāstravanōditante gādeya māḍi biṭṭitante

hādi tappi naḍedu yamana bādhege tā guriyāyitante || 3 ||

nānā janmavanettitante mānavanāgi huṭṭitante

kānanakānana tirugitante tānu tannane mareyitante || 4 ||

maṅgana kaiya māṇikyadante hāṅgū hīṅgū kaḷedītante

raṅgaviṭhalana maretitante bhaṅga bahaḷa paṭṭitante || 5 ||

I pray never to forget the import of this song, may Sri Purandara Dasa and all the great Vaishnava saints guide me back home.

Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare
The Hare Krishna Mahamantra

Delicious Names!

The Names of God are Unlimitedly Sweet. Purandara Dasa, who was a multi-billionaire, gave up the sweeter than honey money to taste the delicious names of God.

He wrote a beautiful song about the sweetness of the Lord’s Names…

To the Milk of Rama’s Name, add the Sugar of Krishna’s Name

Add the Ghee* of Vitthala’s Name, and Smack your Lips!

Bring the Wheat of Single-Mindedness, Grind with the Stones of Renunciation

Draw out the Fine Flour of Simplicity, and Roll into Thin Vermicelli

In the Pot of your Heart, with the Green Gram of your Faith

Cook it all down with your Intelligence, and Serve to Hari’s plate

Oh Joy Oh Bliss when you Experience, and Let Out Satisfied Burps

Then remember Our Lord Eternal Vitthala, the Form of Eternal Bliss!

In Feasting on the Holy Name, I offered a glimpse of how those dedicated to the spiritual path can avoid things like eating and sleeping.

Here in this article, I offer a tangible example of a great soul who actually could taste the holy name… and convey that to those of us who may not yet be tasting.

There are many great souls with a tangible taste of the Holy Name of God, for example, the great saint Rupa Goswami wrote this verse…

tuṇḍe tāṇḍavinī ratiṁ vitanute tuṇḍāvalī-labdhaye
karṇa-kroḍa-kaḍambinī ghaṭayate karṇārbudebhyaḥ spṛhām
cetaḥ-prāṅgaṇa-saṅginī vijayate sarvendriyāṇāṁ kṛtiṁ
no jāne janitā kiyadbhir amṛtaiḥ kṛṣṇeti varṇa-dvayī

“I do not know how much nectar the two syllables ‘Kṛṣ-ṇa’ have produced. When the holy name of Kṛṣṇa is chanted, it appears to dance within the mouth. We then desire many, many mouths. When that name enters the holes of the ears, we desire many millions of ears. And when the holy name dances in the courtyard of the heart, it conquers the activities of the mind, and therefore all the senses become inert.”https://vedabase.io/en/library/cc/antya/1/99/

Where I come from, we know a great saint named Purandara Dasa.

Purandara Dasa was born Srinivasa Nayaka, son of a rich diamond merchant. Srinivasa was trained in the fine arts and received a solid spiritual education, but as he grew up, he morphed into a ruthless businessman, business above all else, shrewd, calculating, though completely honest. He was a famed jeweller and he had business interests in mortgages, real estate, farmland, and much much more… all this over 500 years ago!

His net worth was said to be the equivalent of 90 million gold coins. If one gold coin was just 10 grams, then that means he owned the equivalent of 900,000 kilograms of gold. In today’s price of gold, Srinivasa Nayaka had an estimated net worth of slightly over USD 68 Billion, or with the current exchange rate!

For the sake of my readers in India, that is Five Lakh Forty Seven Thousand Crore Rupees as of today, or 5,47,000 Crore Rupees!

But, God had delicious plans for Srinivasa Nayaka! He appeared in very interesting disguises to Srinivasa Nayaka. Once there was an intriguing pastime of the nose ring of his wife, Saraswati… and completely bewildered and smitten, when our hero was hopelessly in love with God, he was instructed by God to give away all his wealth and focus exclusively on devotional service. Srinivasa Nayaka had to part with his dearest possession, his wealth, to gain the wealth of God!

How often do we find a Billionaire who gives away $68Bn of wealth and engage himself as a Haridasa, a fully surrendered servant of God?

Srinivasa Nayaka did that, and received initiation from Vyasa Tirtha, a pre-eminent saint in the line of Sri Madhwacharya. Sripad Vyasa Tirtha happens to the the grand-spiritual master of Sripad Madhavendra Puri of the Brahma-Madhwa-Gaudiya Sampradaya, into which this humble author has received initiation from Sripad Sankarshan Das Adhikari, disciple of Srila A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.

Initiated as Purandara Dasa, and given the “pen name” of “Purandara Vitthala”, Purandara Dasa is said to have composed more than 475,000 “kritis” or songs. Unfortunately for us, we have only a few known to us today, approximately 1000. Purandara Dasa, like many other pure devotees, Haridasas, spontaneously composed beautiful songs.

His songs are collectively referred to as “Purandaropanishad”… which can be translated as the eternal instructions that bring us closer to the Lord.

His songs explain the most esoteric of concepts in a very simple way, and even ordinary souls such as myself can understand, appreciate, and relish them. The result of meditating on his songs is that our devotional service becomes stronger.

One of my favourite songs of Purandara Dasa is about the most delicious Names of God…

The Names of God are sweeter to Purandara Dasa, whereas to ordinary souls, Money is sweeter than honey, but Purandara Dasa gave all his vast wealth away to obtain the wealth of the Names of God

Rama Nama Payasake – To the Milk of Rama’s Name…

In Kannada Script, the song looks like this:

ರಾಮನಾಮ ಪಾಯಸಕ್ಕೆ ಕೃಷ್ಣನಾಮ ಸಕ್ಕರೆ
ವಿಠಲನಾಮ ತುಪ್ಪವ ಬೆರೆಸಿ ಬಾಯಿ ಚಪ್ಪರಿಸಿರೊ

ಒಮ್ಮನ ಗೋಧಿಯ ತಂದು ವೈರಾಗ್ಯ ಕಲ್ಲಲಿ ಬೀಸಿ
ಸುಮ್ಮನ ಸಜ್ಜಿಗೆ ತೆಗೆದು ಸಣ್ಣ ಸೇವೆಗೆ ಹೊಸೆದು

ಹೃದಯವೆಂಬೊ ಪಾತ್ರೆಯೊಳಗೆ ಭಾವವೆಂಬೊ ಎಸರು ಇಟ್ಟು
ಬುದ್ದಿಯಿಂದ ಪಕ್ವವ ಮಾಡಿ ಹರಿವಾಣದೊಳಗೆ ನೀಡಿ

ಆನಂದ ಆನಂದವೆಂಬೊ ತೇಗು ಬಂದ ಪರಿಯಲಿ
ಆನಂದಮೂರುತಿ ನಮ್ಮ ಪುರಂದರವಿಠಲ ನೆನೆಯಿರೊ

raama naama paayasakke kRuShNanaama sakkare |
viThalanaama tuppava kalasi baayi capparisiro ||pa||

ommaana gOdhiya taMdu vairaagya kallili bIsi |
summane sajjigeya tegedu saNNa shaavigeya hosedu ||1||

hRudayaveMbo maDakeyalli bhaavaveMbo esaraniTTu |
buddhiyiMda paakamaaDi harivaaNake baDisikoMDu ||2||

aanaMda aanaMdaveMbo tEgu baMditu kANirO |
aanaMda mUruti namma puraMdara viThalana neneyiro ||3||

– Purandara Dasa

I will try to offer a translation for those who may not be conversant with Kannada…

To the Milk of Rama’s Name, add the Sugar of Krishna’s Name

Add the Ghee* of Vitthala’s Name, and Smack your Lips!

Bring the Wheat of Single-Mindedness, Grind with the Stones of Renunciation

Draw out the Fine Flour of Simplicity, and Roll into Thin Vermicelli

In the Pot of your Heart, with the Green Gram of your Faith

Cook it all down with your Intelligence, and Serve to Hari’s plate

Oh Joy Oh Bliss when you Experience, and Let Out Satisfied Burps

Then remember Our Lord Eternal Vitthala, the Form of Eternal Bliss!

– Purandara Dasa’s Rama Nama Payasake, translation by Mahabhagavata Dasa

* Ghee – Clarified Butter, a delicacy used to enhance the flavour of various dishes. Like most Bhakti experiences, it must be tasted and experienced in that way, there is no theoretical way to understand this flavour, the aroma, etc.

Now, my dear reader, please allow me to introduce the deep eternal spiritual truths contained in this simple 4-stanza song.

The Name of God is Sweet!

Is there any doubt about this Yes, beginners may not experience the sweetness, but it is not for lack of sweetness in the Lord’s names, but for the diseased tongue of the beginner to spiritual life… Rupa Goswami Says:

स्यात् कृष्णनामचरितादिसिताप्यविद्यापित्तोपतप्तरसनस्य न रोचिका नु ।
किन्त्वादरादनुदिनं खलु सैव जुष्टा स्वाद्वी क्रमाद्भवति तद्गदमूलहन्त्री ॥ ७ ॥

syāt kṛṣṇa-nāma-caritādi-sitāpy avidyā-
pittopatapta-rasanasya na rocikā nu
kintv ādarād anudinaṁ khalu saiva juṣṭā
svādvī kramād bhavati tad-gada-mūla-hantrī

The holy name, character, pastimes and activities of Kṛṣṇa are all transcendentally sweet like sugar candy. Although the tongue of one afflicted by the jaundice of avidyā [ignorance] cannot taste anything sweet, it is wonderful that simply by carefully chanting these sweet names every day, a natural relish awakens within his tongue, and his disease is gradually destroyed at the root.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/noi/7/

Single Mindedness is essential for Spiritual Perfection

For the attainment of any goal, focus is a requirement. The rarer and more distinguished the prize, the more single-minded focus is required.

Krishna says, in the Bhagavad Gita:

व्यवसायात्मिका बुद्धिरेकेह कुरूनन्दन ।
बहुशाखा ह्यनन्ताश्च बुद्धयोऽव्यवसायिनाम् ॥ ४१ ॥


vyavasāyātmikā buddhir
ekeha kuru-nandana
bahu-śākhā hy anantāś ca
buddhayo ’vyavasāyinām

Those who are on this path are resolute in purpose, and their aim is one. O beloved child of the Kurus, the intelligence of those who are irresolute is many-branched.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/2/41/

Renunciation from Worldly Goals is required for someone seeking spiritual perfection

Krishna then continues, further on…

भोगैश्वर्यप्रसक्तानां तयापहृतचेतसाम् ।
व्यवसायात्मिका बुद्धिः समाधौ न विधीयते ॥ ४४ ॥


bhogaiśvarya-prasaktānāṁ
tayāpahṛta-cetasām
vyavasāyātmikā buddhiḥ
samādhau na vidhīyate

In the minds of those who are too attached to sense enjoyment and material opulence, and who are bewildered by such things, the resolute determination for devotional service to the Supreme Lord does not take place.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/2/44/

Spiritual Life means Simplicity without any Duplicity

To some, spiritual life is extremely easy. To others it is the, most difficult thing.

Again, in the Bhagavad Gita describes the qualities of someone who is in spiritual life.

अमानित्वमदम्भित्वमहिंसा क्षान्तिरार्जवम्
आचार्योपासनं शौचं स्थैर्यमात्मविनिग्रह: ॥ ८ ॥


amānitvam adambhitvam ahiṁsā kṣāntir ārjavam
ācāryopāsanaṁ śaucaṁ sthairyam ātma-vinigrahaḥ


Humility; pridelessness; nonviolence; tolerance; simplicity; approaching a bona fide spiritual master; cleanliness; steadiness; self-control

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/13/8-12/

Simple for the simple, difficult for the crooked!

God lives in our Heart, so working on our heart is essential, it’s a very personal loving thing, not just dry intellectual pursuit!

तेषामेवानुकम्पार्थमहमज्ञानजं तम: ।
नाशयाम्यात्मभावस्थो ज्ञानदीपेन भास्वता ॥ ११ ॥


teṣām evānukampārtham
aham ajñāna-jaṁ tamaḥ
nāśayāmy ātma-bhāva-stho
jñāna-dīpena bhāsvatā

To show them special mercy, I, dwelling in their hearts, destroy with the shining lamp of knowledge the darkness born of ignorance.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/10/11/

Faith in the Spiritual Process is a Necessary Ingredient

अश्रद्दधाना: पुरुषा धर्मस्यास्य परन्तप ।
अप्राप्य मां निवर्तन्ते मृत्युसंसारवर्त्मनि ॥ ३ ॥


aśraddadhānāḥ puruṣā
dharmasyāsya paran-tapa
aprāpya māṁ nivartante
mṛtyu-saṁsāra-vartmani

Those who are not faithful in this devotional service cannot attain Me, O conqueror of enemies. Therefore they return to the path of birth and death in this material world.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/9/3/

Spiritual Progress is Made by those who endeavour Intelligently

इन्द्रियाणि पराण्याहुरिन्द्रियेभ्यः परं मनः ।
मनसस्तु परा बुद्धिर्यो बुद्धेः परतस्तु सः ॥ ४२ ॥


indriyāṇi parāṇy āhur
indriyebhyaḥ paraṁ manaḥ
manasas tu parā buddhir
yo buddheḥ paratas tu saḥ

The working senses are superior to dull matter; mind is higher than the senses; intelligence is still higher than the mind; and he [the soul] is even higher than the intelligence.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/bg/3/42/

In the purport to the above verse, Srila Prabhupada writes…

With intelligence one has to seek out the constitutional position of the soul and then engage the mind always in Kṛṣṇa consciousness. That solves the whole problem. A neophyte spiritualist is generally advised to keep aloof from the objects of the senses. But aside from that, one has to strengthen the mind by use of intelligence. If by intelligence one engages one’s mind in Kṛṣṇa consciousness, by complete surrender unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead, then, automatically, the mind becomes stronger, and even though the senses are very strong, like serpents, they will be no more effective than serpents with broken fangs. But even though the soul is the master of intelligence and mind, and the senses also, still, unless it is strengthened by association with Kṛṣṇa in Kṛṣṇa consciousness, there is every chance of falling down due to the agitated mind. – BG 3.42 purport by A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Spiritual Perfection Must be Offered to God

Srila Prabhupada summarizes, in his Nectar of Devotion…

By the process of executing regulated devotional service, one is actually elevated to the transcendental stage, beyond the material modes of nature. At that time one’s heart becomes illuminated like the sun. The sun is far above the planetary systems, and there is no possibility of its being covered by any kind of cloud; similarly, when a devotee is purified like the sun, from his pure heart there is a diffusion of ecstatic love which is more glorious than the sunshine. Only at that time is the attachment to Kṛṣṇa perfect. Spontaneously, the devotee becomes eager to serve the Lord in his ecstatic love.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/nod/17/

There is no happiness like that from chanting God’s Holy names for anyone

In the Srimad Bhagavatam, we find this verse:

एतन्निर्विद्यमानानामिच्छतामकुतोभयम् ।
योगिनां नृप निर्णीतं हरेर्नामानुकीर्तनम् ॥ ११ ॥


etan nirvidyamānānām
icchatām akuto-bhayam
yogināṁ nṛpa nirṇītaṁ
harer nāmānukīrtanam


O King, constant chanting of the holy name of the Lord after the ways of the great authorities is the doubtless and fearless way of success for all, including those who are free from all material desires, those who are desirous of all material enjoyment, and also those who are self-satisfied by dint of transcendental knowledge.

https://vedabase.io/en/library/sb/2/1/11/

But we can see which taste is more delicious… the taste of untold wealth, or the taste of the Holy Names of God.

Purandara Dasa is the example.

Purandara Dasa is also known as the Father of Carnatic Classical Music, but above mere music is His simple devotion, which he expressed through music.

What will we give up to taste the most unlimitedly delicious sweet clear pure Names of God?

What if all you had to do was to chant this Mantra without giving anything else up?

Hare Krishna Hare Krishna Krishna Krishna Hare Hare Hare Rama Hare Rama Rama Rama Hare Hare

My Dear Reader, would you please chant this Mantra even just once?

Purandara Dasa is a Mahabhagavata, a mighty pure devotee of the Lord, and this Mahabhagavata Dasa aspires to be the servants of his servants, and hankers to taste their delicious remnants.