Digital narration of “Devoted to Rama”

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🌷“I am faithfully engaged in the service of Rama, who is as immovable as a great mountain, as great a lord as Mahendra [Indra], and who, like a great ocean, is incapable of being agitated.” (Sita Devi speaking to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.33)🌷

🙏All glories to the assembled devotees🙏

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#harekrishna
#sitaram
#ramayan

DEDICATION All glories to Sita Devi, precious daughter  of King Janaka and Shri Rama’s beloved wife,  Your words from the Ramayana are  to me the greatest gift in life. From past and current sinful deeds,  countless rebirths I’m sure to get, 

But wherever I end up, devotion  to you may I never forget.     INTRODUCTION For diversion adviser Maricha to Dandaka sent, Then Lanka’s Ravana to Sita’s hermitage went. In guise of a brahmana he made many an advance,  So then Sita to disclose her  identity took the chance.

Her husband’s divine qualities she knew very well,  Of Rama’s dedication to  welfare of all she did tell. Her unalloyed devotion to  Bhagavan so heartwarming,  She was Rama’s perfect  match, of beauty so charming. With abduction fiend Ravana deplorable to behave, Through her words to him stern warning Sita gave.

From those verses her devotion  so beautifully presented,  By Rama’s arrows Ravana soon to be tormented. CHAPTER 1 – IDENTITY VALUE “All blessings upon you, I  am the daughter of Janaka,   the great soul [mahatma] and King of  Mithila. My name is Sita and I am the  

Beloved queen of Lord Rama.” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.3) The concept of identity politics seems  to have really taken off in recent times,   but it is actually an age-old technique.  Politicians running for office try to   align themselves with various factions, or  groups of people who base their identity  

Off a certain trait or interest.  For example, politicians will try   to identify themselves as being for women,  blacks, Hispanics, labor unions, gun owners,   etc. This type of strategy is considered very  important in regards to winning elections. In democratic elections, you can’t win over every  voter. In two-man races, a simple majority of  

The vote is required for victory, meaning a large  portion of the electorate can still be against you   if you end up winning. Therefore most political  strategists advise candidates to look at the   voting base as a collection or amalgamation  of groups and factions. For a candidate,  

The goal is to energize their base. The base is  determined by the political party or set of ideas   that the candidate stands for. As soon as you  take a stand on any important issue in politics,   people will immediately choose sides,  resulting in some people being for you  

And some people being against you. The  strategy is to adjust your stances on the   issues in just the right way so that more  people are for you than are against you. Identity politics is a great way to pick off  various factions of voters and get them to become  

Solidly in favor of your candidacy. Identity  politics works because it tells voters that   they can trust such and such candidate because  they are similar to them in nature. For example,   a black candidate will claim to identify with  black voters. “I have been through the same  

Struggles that you have. Therefore, if I am  elected, I will fight for you every day.” This   same principle applies to other voting groups  such as women, minorities, and labor unions. While identity politics may help people  get elected, its logic is seriously  

Flawed. It makes the assumption that all  people of a certain skin color, gender,   or occupation think exactly the same way. If  we give this idea any serious thought, we will   quickly realize the flaw in its premise. All women  don’t think alike. Every person in this world has  

Certain qualities they inherit at the time of  birth, and they also have certain desires that   manifest throughout the course of their lifetime.  This holds true for any person. The famous saying,   “Don’t judge a book by its cover”, is appropriate  in this regard. The cover of a book serves as its  

Presentation. Some book covers look nice, while  others do not. However, the actual content of   the book is a different issue. The book cover may  be appealing, but it’s the actual words contained   within the book that matter. The famous civil  rights leader, Martin Luther King Jr, declared  

That it is the content of a person’s character  that matters, and not the color of their skin. The idea of equality originates from  the Vedas, the ancient scriptures of   India. Vedic information tells us that every  living entity is a spirit soul at the core,  

And that the body simply serves as a covering  for the soul. It is customary for a government   to protect the citizens of its own country  more so than the foreigners, or immigrants,   who take up residence. A person who takes  birth inside the physical boundaries of  

A country is classified as a national, and is  automatically granted citizenship rights. Thus   it is the duty of the government to take  care of and protect all of its citizens,   regardless of their physical attributes. By  playing identity politics, groups and classes of  

People are pitted against one another. This goes  against the very nature of government, and thus it   is not surprising that most people remain unhappy  with the politicians that run their country. “If we can’t base our identity  on our physical attributes,  

Where should we get it from? The Vedas  tell us that we are spirit souls,   but what does that mean? What is the origin  of the soul?” The Vedas tell us that we are   part and parcel of God, or Lord Krishna. Our  souls are mere fragments of the supreme whole,  

Or the great soul who is known as Bhagavan, or  the Supreme Personality of Godhead. There is no   difference in quality between a particle of gold  and a huge block of gold. However, the huge block   of gold is certainly greater in value, and thus  more important and powerful. In a similar manner,  

God is the creator and origin of everything,  thus His soul, Paramatma, is supreme. Our souls,   jivatma, are similar to Paramatma in  quality, but far inferior in quantity. Since we are spirit souls, part and parcel of  God, our original nature is that of servant to the  

Supreme Lord. Everyone serves something, whether  they know it or not. Some serve their husband or   wife, others serve their children, and others  even serve their pets. This service attitude   is there in people because that’s what makes them  happy. This happiness is a watered down version of  

The pure bliss that the soul experiences when it  engages in bhakti yoga, or devotional service to   God. Based on these facts, we can see that every  living entity’s true identity comes from their   relationship to God. This is precisely how Sita  Devi, the wife of Lord Rama, identified herself.

During the Treta Yuga, the second time period  of creation, Lord Krishna, God Himself,   descended to earth in human form as Lord  Rama. Maharaja Dasharatha was ruling the   kingdom of Ayodhya at the time, and he  wished for a son to whom he could pass  

Down his kingdom. Also at the time, the demon  race was quickly ascending to power throughout   the world. To grant Dasharatha’s wish and  to also curb the influence of the demons,   God decided He would come to earth as a  human and take birth as Dasharatha’s son.

When Rama reached the appropriate age, He was  married to the daughter of Maharaja Janaka,   the King of Mithila. Janaka’s eldest  daughter was a beautiful girl named Sita,   whom he had found one day while ploughing a  field. Sita was just a baby when Janaka found her,  

But he raised her and treated her as his most  prized possession. After twelve years of marriage,   Sita and Rama embarked on a fourteen year  journey through the woods with Rama’s younger   brother Lakshmana. On one particular day, the  Rakshasa demon Ravana came to the group’s camp  

And created a diversion whereby both Rama  and Lakshmana left Sita’s side. Ravana,   in the guise of a mendicant, approached Sita  and she responded by identifying herself. Sita was an incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi,  the wife of Lord Narayana. Lord Krishna is   the original Godhead, but He has many direct  expansions classified as vishnu-tattva. Lord  

Narayana is one of Krishna’s primary expansions,  and thus He can be considered to be as good as   God Himself. There is no difference  between Krishna and His incarnations,   meaning that one can worship Narayana, Rama,  Krishna, Vishnu, etc. and they will be worshiping  

The same original God. Lakshmi is exquisitely  beautiful, as was Sita. Sita also had many other   great personal features and characteristics. Yet  we see that when asked to identify herself by a   stranger, Sita didn’t reference anything  relating to her exalted personal status.

“He who attributes his virtues to You and  holds himself responsible for his sinfulness;   who fixes all his hopes on You and loves  Your devotees – in his heart dwell,   You and Sita.” (Maharishi Valmiki speaking to Lord  Rama, Ramacharitamanasa, Ayodhya Kand, 130.1-4)

Sita identified herself in terms of her  relationship with Rama, God Himself, and Janaka,   a devotee of God. This is the behavior of a  great soul. Devotees of the Lord know the truth,   and thus they never take themselves to be exalted.  The devotees are the true mahatmas, for Sita even  

Referred to Janaka as being a mahatma when she  identified herself. At the time of this incident,   Sita had already compiled a great résumé of pious  deeds. She was famous throughout the world as an   exemplary daughter, wife, and woman. The  group was travelling through the forest  

Because Rama had been punished by Dasharatha.  Rama insisted that Sita remain in the kingdom,   but she refused to abandon her husband. Given  the chance to identify herself, Sita downplayed   all her personal traits and instead used  the opportunity to praise Rama and Janaka.

We too should strive to base our identity off our  relationship with God and His devotees. God is our   original friend and object of affection, but due  to our conditioned state, we have forgotten Him.   It is through the mercy of the pure devotee, the  spiritual master, that we can rekindle our loving  

Relationship with God. If we take up the process  of devotional service, and remain committed to   honoring and serving the devotees, we will give up  the false bodily designations we currently apply   to ourselves. Instead of claiming to be Indian,  American, black, white, man, or woman, if we  

Simply view ourselves as humble servants of Sita  and Rama, ours will be an identity worth having. CHAPTER 2 – MOTHER-IN-LAW “Living in the kingdom of the Ikshvakus  for twelve years, I enjoyed every delight   imaginable to human beings and had all my  desires fulfilled. Upon the thirteenth year,  

The king invited all his ministers to  an assembly to discuss the installation   of Rama as the new king. When it was thus  decided in that assembly that Rama would   succeed His father as king, my respectable  mother-in-law, Kaikeyi, begged for a boon  

From her husband.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.4-6) In this world, one of the most beautiful  relationships is the one between a mother   and her child. The mother-son relationship  is particularly strong because the mother   views herself as the protector of her helpless  son. With good mothers, this attitude continues  

Throughout the child’s life, no matter  the age. On the flip side of things, the   relationship between the son’s wife and the son’s  mother is usually one of the most contentious.   The friction that exists between a wife and her  mother-in-law has formed the basis of much comedy,  

Playing on the stereotype of the relationship.  As tough as this relationship usually is,   there was no such friction between Sita Devi, the  wife of Lord Rama, and her three mother-in-laws. Yes, that is correct. Sita Devi had three  mother-in-laws since Lord Rama technically  

Had three mothers. During ancient Vedic times,  the governments were run by kshatriyas. Kshatriya   kings were known as rajas, and they lived in the  mode of passion. Vedic information tells us that   all the activities of living entities can be  classified into one of three distinct modes:  

Goodness, passion, or ignorance. Goodness is  represented by acts of knowledge, i.e. studying   the Vedas and working towards the emancipation  of the soul. Passion refers to fruitive activity,   or karma, aimed at procuring various boons and  results which bear fruit either in this life  

Or the next. Ignorance is any activity  which lacks both goodness and passion. The government’s foremost duty is to provide  protection to the citizens. Therefore certain   qualities are required of the people who  are to provide this protection. Just as  

Any job has a certain skill-set required for  success, the job of a kshatriya, or protector,   requires one to be brave, strong, courageous, and  an expert fighter. These qualities usually aren’t   found in people in the mode of goodness,  the brahmanas. The brahmanas, or priests,  

Are non-violent by nature due to the fact  that they understand the non-duality that   exists between living entities. There has been  a strong push for equality amongst genders and   races in recent times, but the Vedas go  one step further by telling us that there  

Is indeed equality amongst all living entities.  Constitutionally, there is no difference between   human beings and animals. Animals have the same  type of soul as human beings because there are   actually no differences between the souls  of living entities. God is the supreme soul,  

Paramatma, and we living entities are  all jivatmas, minute or ordinary souls. Since brahmanas understand the equality amongst  all living entities, they are not inclined to be   violent towards anyone. Also, brahmanas have  specific prescribed duties they must perform,   which include studying the Vedas,  teaching others Vedic wisdom,  

Performing sacrifices for Lord Vishnu,  teaching others how to perform sacrifices,   and giving and accepting charity. In order  to be qualified to perform these tasks,   one must go through years of training from  a guru, or spiritual master. This means that   brahmanas don’t have the time to practice the  military arts. Kshatriyas are well-suited for  

Providing protection because they are in the mode  of passion. Since they are strong and more prone   to physical activity, they are better suited to  fight off enemies. Being in the mode of passion   has a few drawbacks however. The mode of passion  means satisfying the desires of the gross senses,  

The strongest of which is the desire for sex.  The Vedas exist so that mankind can adhere to   a set of law codes that will enable their souls to  return back home, back to God’s spiritual kingdom   after death. The desire for sex is the hardest to  control and therefore also represents the biggest  

Hindrance towards spiritual advancement. Sex  life is essentially a temporary and illusory   form of sense gratification, and it can be very  addictive. Those who are attached to sex life are   forced to repeatedly take birth in the material  world, for life itself can’t exist without sex.

Since kshatriyas are in the mode of passion, it  is much more difficult for them to control their   sexual urges than it is, say, for the brahmanas,  who are in the mode of goodness. Due to this fact,  

Kshatriyas are allowed to marry more than once in  order to satisfy their sexual urges. In this way,   sex life is sanctioned, but it still remains  regulated. On the surface this may seem strange   to us. “The Vedas allow for polygamy? Isn’t that  for freaks and weirdos?” If the wife remains  

Completely protected by the husband, then this  sort of marriage system is actually okay. The   other benefit to this system is that it reduces  the likelihood of illicit sex because there will   be less unmarried women in society. We see that  famous rock stars, athletes, actors and actresses  

Today are constantly finding themselves in  trouble due to marital infidelity and other   problems related to illicit sex. In fact, studies  show that one of the best ways to avoid being in   poverty is to wait until after you are married  to have children, i.e. abstinence until marriage.

The Vedas define illicit sex as any sexual  activity that occurs outside the bounds of   marriage and also outside of the desire for  progeny. Kshatriya kings would often have   many wives but they would only engage in sexual  activity for the purpose of having children. In  

This way, even people in the mode of passion  could make spiritual advancement. The first   king on earth was Maharaja Ikshvaku, the son of  Manu, the first man on earth. There are two famous   dynasties of kings; one starting from the sun-god  and the other starting from the moon-god. Ikshvaku  

Was the originator of the solar dynasty since  his father was the son of Surya, the sun-god.   Ikshvaku set the standard for good government and  administration. His descendants became known as   the Ikshvakus and they all followed his example of  chivalry and dedication to providing protection.

Therefore it was no accident that when Lord  Krishna, God Himself, decided to appear on   earth many thousands of years ago, He did  so in the Ikshvaku family. Known as Rama,   the Lord was the eldest son of the king of  Ayodhya, Maharaja Dasharatha. Rama took a vow  

To accept only one wife. His one wife was no  ordinary woman either, for she was Sita Devi,   an incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi, the wife of  Lord Narayana. Lord Vishnu is also known as Lord   Narayana, Krishna’s four-handed form who resides  in the spiritual planets of Vaikuntha. Though Rama  

Accepted only one wife, His father had three:  Kausalya, Sumitra, and Kaikeyi. Kausalya was   Rama’s birth mother, but the Lord treated all  of Dasharatha’s wives with the same level of   respect. So in this regard, Sita Devi inherited  three mother-in-laws at the time of her marriage.

The reason for the friction that occurs between  mothers and the wives of their sons is quite   obvious. The mother views herself as the ultimate  caretaker of the son. She not only bore the child   in her womb for nine months, but she nurtured  the child through the early years. A good mother,  

Or parent for that matter, is one who doesn’t  care about being liked or disliked. They will   lay down the law and nag and pester their kids  to do the right thing no matter what. Sometimes,   kids will become frustrated with their parents  or even hate them but, in the end, they grow  

Up to appreciate and respect them. The love that  a mother shows towards her son never ends. Even   if the son reaches adulthood, the giving of  instruction and advice never stops. However,   when the son gets married, the natural  order of things gets shifted a little.

For the son, the wife is a replacement  for the mother in a lot of ways. The   Vedas provide clear and defined roles for the  husband and wife in a marriage. The husband is   required to protect the wife completely, and  the wife is to serve and honor the husband as  

Her primary deity. Marriage is known as a  religious institution, grihastha ashrama,   meaning it is meant to help both parties make  spiritual advancement. When there is a lack   of adherence to dharma, the senses tend to  act uncontrollably. This leads a person away  

From God. Therefore there is a specific dharma  assigned to both the man and woman so that they   can control their senses while being married.  The mother of the husband naturally will feel a   little threatened when her son gets married.  The wife now becomes the primary caretaker,  

Thus diminishing the mother’s influence. But  a good mother will never stop loving her son;   therefore she will not hesitate to give advice  to the daughter-in-law. This can cause great   friction because the wife is essentially being  told what to do by a complete stranger. Also,  

She can’t get into arguments with the  mother-in-law because that will upset the husband. In Sita Devi’s situation, the potential  for problems was compounded by the fact   that she had three mother-in-laws. Yet  from the above referenced statement,   we see that her first twelve years of  marriage were completely blissful. How was  

This possible? Sita was a pure devotee right from  her birth. Though she never studied under a guru,   she could actually teach anyone about the  Vedas and the proper duties of a man and a   woman. She treated all of Rama’s mothers  with love and respect and never had any  

Friction with them. They all loved her  and treated her like their own daughter. This harmony existed because Sita was not  only a great devotee, but she was living with   God. The spiritual world is our natural home.  Currently we are travelling in a foreign land,  

And the worst part about our trip is that we  don’t know when it will end. Thankfully for us,   Krishna and His bona fide representatives come  to rescue us. The Vedas emanate from Krishna,   thus they are non-different from Him. The  various rules and regulations exist so that  

One can take the necessary steps to return back  to the spiritual world. The devotees are pure   liberated souls, meaning they can help others  get out of the clutches of maya, or illusion. True happiness only comes through  association with God. This is what  

We can take away from Sita Devi’s description  of the early years of her marriage. In fact,   when Rama was later forced into exile, Sita  insisted on accompanying Him. While living in   the forest, Sita was equally as happy since  she was with God. If we commit ourselves to  

Taking up devotional service, we too can  always be happy and look back on our time   on earth with the same fondness that Sita did  in regards to her early years of marriage. CHAPTER 3 – PIOUS CREDITS “Bringing my father-in-law under  control by means of her virtuous deeds,  

Kaikeyi begged of that truthful, best of  monarchs, two boons; namely the exile of   my husband into the woods and the installation  of Bharata. Kaikeyi said, ‘I shall never eat,   drink, or sleep. I will end my life if  Rama is installed.’ Kaikeyi speaking thus,  

That lord of earth, my father-in-law, begged her  to accept diverse riches instead, but Kaikeyi   did not agree. At the time, my husband, the  highly-effulgent Rama, was twenty-five years old,   and I was eighteen.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.7-10)

Acting in a pious manner can go a long way  towards earning respect and praise from   others. “No good deed goes unpunished” is a famous  aphorism, but we see that more times than not,   virtuous deeds reward the performer with prestige  and honor. In one sense, it’s almost as if each  

Noble act allows a person to accumulate merits  that can later be cashed in for favors and   other perks. This theory holds true not only in  material life, but with respect to God as well. Most of us realize that we are flawed and  that we are sinners. “To ere is human” is  

How the saying goes, so we realize that we are  prone to committing mistakes. The Vedas tell us   that man actually has four defects he inherits  at the time of birth: the propensity to cheat,   to commit mistakes, to have imperfect senses, and  to be easily illusioned. Even the most deluded  

Of people realize that they are not perfect.  This realization leads many of us to constantly   examine and assess our behavior. We often look  to the example set by others to determine how we   should act. The virtuous set a good example  that we can learn from. As the saying goes,  

“He who hesitates is lost”, most of us don’t  like to be unsure in our actions. We want to   adopt a certain path in life and stick to it.  It is much easier to follow the path set by the  

Virtuous than it is to create our own path  and then doubt the decisions that we make. The virtuous achieve their standing in society  based on the deeds they have performed. Once   people recognize a person as honest, pure,  truthful, and pious, that person then assumes  

A respected status. This status allows the  virtuous to be taken seriously and it also   makes it harder to argue against them. A perfect  example of this was seen with Bill Bennett,   the former Secretary of Education in  the 1980s. Known as a pious individual,  

Bennett even authored an anthology  called The Book of Virtues. Since   he had a specific political affiliation,  politicians of opposing political parties   viewed Bennett as a major threat to them.  Anytime Bennett would criticize someone,   it would be very hard for anyone to counter  his arguments due to his respected status.

When it was later discovered that Bill  Bennett had a major addiction to gambling,   political opponents breathed a sigh of  relief. The benefits of Bennett’s pious   deeds immediately became exhausted.  He turned out to be flawed after all,   and his transgressions cost him his exalted  status. This proves that pious activity and  

Virtuous deeds can only take us so far.  If we don’t use our accumulated merit for   the right purposes, our fame and stature  can quickly deteriorate. Another example   of this principle in action was seen many  thousands of years ago during the Treta Yuga.

For a period of time during that age, the city  of Ayodhya was ruled by Maharaja Dasharatha. He   was a very pious king belonging to one of the most  famous dynasties in history, the Ikshvakus. As was   customary during that time, Dasharatha had three  wives. His youngest wife, Kaikeyi, was pious and  

Virtuous. Dasharatha was also very attracted  to her, so much so that he brought her along   one time during a battle with the asuras. During  those times, kings belonged to the warrior caste,   meaning they were all expert fighters. Similar  to how George Washington, a general and war hero  

Himself, served as America’s first President, the  great war heroes of the past served as the kings. As King of Ayodhya, Dasharatha’s duty was to fight  against the asuras, or demons. According to the   Vedic definition, the king is the representative  of God on earth, meaning he is to be chivalrous  

And committed to dharma. Asuras are atheistic in  nature, and they view those adhering to dharma as   their enemies. For this reason, there has been  an ongoing war between the devotees of God and   the asuras since the beginning of time. During  one particular battle, Dasharatha was wounded,  

And Kaikeyi had the good sense to remove him  from the battlefield. Since she saved his life,   Dasharatha granted her any two boons  of her choosing. Being a smart lady,   Kaikeyi held onto those boons so she could  use them at a more opportune time. The perfect  

Opportunity presented itself on the eve of the  coronation of Lord Rama, Dasharatha’s eldest son. As Lord Krishna declares in the Bhagavad-gita,  He personally appears on earth from time to time   to annihilate the miscreants and protect the  devotees. During the Treta Yuga, one Rakshasa  

Demon in particular was wreaking havoc throughout  the world. To alleviate the distressful situation,   God came to earth in the guise of a human  being. Taking birth as the eldest son of   King Dasharatha and Queen Kausalya, God’s  incarnation was known by the name of Rama,  

For He gave pleasure to everyone He  met. Dasharatha was more attached to   Rama than anyone else, so he decided one day to  install Him as the next king. Along with Rama,   Dasharatha had three other younger sons  who took birth from his two other wives.  

Lakshmana and Shatrughna were born to Queen  Sumitra, and Bharata was born to Queen Kaikeyi. Just prior to Rama’s coronation, Kaikeyi  demanded that Bharata be given the throne   instead. She also insisted that Rama be sent  to live in the forest for fourteen years,  

So as to make sure that Bharata’s  initial reign as king would go on   without any interference. Dasharatha really  had no choice in the matter. As committed to   dharma as he was, he was forced to accede  to Kaikeyi’s requests. During those times,  

A king’s word was taken very seriously. If a  king lied, he immediately became unworthy of   his post. This makes sense because people will  naturally follow the example of their government   leaders. A government’s primary duty is to  provide protection and to punish criminals.  

If the king himself doesn’t tell the truth, how  can he punish others who commit the same crime? After Dasharatha agreed to Kaikeyi’s demands,  Rama left for the forest along with His wife,   Sita Devi, and younger brother, Lakshmana. In  the above referenced quote, Sita is explaining  

To Ravana how she ended up in the forest. After  creating a diversion which sent both Rama and   Lakshmana away from their cottage, Ravana,  assuming the guise of a brahmana, approached   Sita and asked her to identify herself. We see  that Kaikeyi indeed performed virtuous deeds in  

Her past, but that she used the merit accumulated  from such deeds for nefarious purposes. Rama was   loved and adored by all; moreover, He was the  rightful heir to the throne. Bharata himself   was mortified when he found out what his mother  had done. Sita also was completely blameless,  

But she too was forced to live in the  forest as a result of Kaikeyi’s deeds. Being virtuous is certainly a good thing, but  ultimately it can’t lead to perfection unless   such activity is directed towards Lord Krishna,  or God. The results of our good and bad deeds  

Eventually expire, and we are left to start over  again. In order to achieve perfection in life, we   should aim our good deeds towards God’s service.  This type of activity is known as bhakti yoga,   or devotional service. Krishna is the ultimate  reservoir of pleasure, so not only does pleasing  

Him cause an accrual of spiritual merits,  but it also gives us everlasting happiness. Lord Hanuman, Lord Rama’s great devotee, is  an example of a person who dedicated his pious   activities to God and achieved perfection as  a result. Right after Sita spoke to Ravana,  

The demon kidnapped her and took her to  his island kingdom of Lanka. Later on,   it would be Hanuman who would leap across  the ocean all the way to Lanka and find Sita.   He then served as one of Rama’s chief  warriors in His battle against Ravana,  

Which ultimately led to the demon’s death and  the rescue of Sita. Rama was very pleased with   Hanuman’s service to Him. Unlike Kaikeyi, Hanuman  didn’t waste his spiritual merits on temporary   material things. He only wanted eternal love and  devotion to Rama, and the Lord granted his wish.

Virtue is its own reward. In the spiritual world,  pure love is known as prema, which means loving   without any expectation of result. This is  the real meaning of love and surrender. “God,   I do everything for You because I love You.  You can offer me nice rewards as a result,  

But I’m only interested in  continuing my service to You,   forever.” This is the mood of the pure  devotees like Hanuman, Sita, Lakshmana,   Radharani, Prahlada, and countless others. The  path to perfection has already been laid out  

For us by the great devotees of the past, so  we simply need to follow in their footsteps. CHAPTER 4 – HARMLESS “My husband Rama is famous throughout the  world. He is pure, truthful, and very gentle.  

He is mighty-armed, has wide eyes, and is always  busy working for the welfare of all living beings   [sarva-bhuta-hite-ratah].” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.11) There is no reason to be antagonistic towards  God. He is kind, pure, truthful, and very merciful  

Towards everyone. More than anything else, He  is a friend to all. This means He views everyone   equally, and doesn’t play favorites in relation  to anyone’s fortunes and misfortunes. Therefore,   there is no reason to hold any animosity towards  Him or His devotees. Since God is so great,  

Those who engage in His service, the  devotees, also inherit His good qualities. In the above referenced quote, Sita Devi  is describing the virtues of her husband,   Lord Rama, to the Rakshasa demon Ravana, who  appeared before her in the guise of a brahmana.  

The Vedas tell us that God is indeed a person and  that His original form is that of Shyamasundara,   the beautiful Lord Shri Krishna whose complexion  is like that of a dark raincloud. Krishna is   always beautiful, and He always appears as a  youth. Some people depict God as an old man,  

And while the Lord can certainly accept any  form at will, the Vedas tell us that God is   indeed the most beautiful person in all of the  universes. He not only possesses beauty, but also   every other admirable attribute known to man.  Since He possesses all opulences to the fullest  

Degree and at the same time, He is known as  Bhagavan, or the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Krishna directly expands Himself into various  forms in order to enact pastimes and other   transcendental activities. One of His most  celebrated incarnations is that of Lord Rama,  

The prince of the Raghu dynasty. The Vedas give  us the lineage of mankind for the first few   generations starting from creation. Included in  this list are the names of some of the earliest   kings who appeared on earth. The first kings that  ruled the earth all traced their lineage back to  

Either the sun-god, Vivasvan, or the moon-god,  Soma. Those following in the line of Vivasvan   were deemed to be part of the solar dynasty.  Maharaja Ikshvaku was the first king in this line,   but many other famous kings followed, one of whom  was Maharaja Raghu. To alleviate the burden put on  

The brahmanas of the time, Lord Krishna decided to  descend to earth in human form as Lord Rama many   thousands of years ago during the Treta Yuga.  Rama was born in the dynasty of King Raghu,   and was thus often referred to by the  names of Raghava, Raghupati, and Raghuvira.

As part of His pastimes, the Lord travelled  through the forests of India for fourteen   years accompanied by His wife, Sita Devi,  and His younger brother, Lakshmana. Sita was   an incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi, the  goddess of fortune. Though God is one,  

He appoints many elevated living entities known  as demigods to manage various departments of the   creation. Lakshmiji is in charge of doling  out good fortune and wealth. Naturally,   God is the richest person in the world  and thus it shouldn’t surprise us that  

He is Lakshmi’s husband. In this way, we  see that God is the greatest recipient   of the fortunes bestowed by Lakshmi. In fact,  all wealth and prosperity that exists in this   world is intended to be used in God’s service,  for this is exactly how Lakshmi views things.

Just as God is the most beautiful man, His  wife is the most beautiful woman. In Sita Devi,   the world saw firsthand the most beautiful woman  to have ever lived. She was the eldest daughter   of the King of Mithila, Maharaja Janaka.  As fate would have it, she would marry Rama  

After Janaka held a wonderful bow-lifting  contest to decide her nuptials. While Sita,   Rama, and Lakshmana were roaming the forests, they  decided to set up camp in Janasthana. At the time,   there was a Rakshasa demon by the name  of Ravana who had ascended to power. He  

Had set up shop on the island of Lanka. Having  tremendous fighting strength and great wealth,   Ravana was a devout atheist. He had hundreds of  wives, but one day he heard about this beautiful   woman living in the forest of Janasthana  with Rama. He hadn’t seen her personally,  

But just based on the descriptions  given to him by his sister, Shurpanakha,   Ravana made up his mind that he could not  live for another moment without having Sita. Up to this point in his life, Ravana had  gotten everything he ever wanted. First  

He performed great austerities to please  various demigods. Pleased with his tapasya,   the devatas granted him extraordinary powers.  Ravana used these powers to then conquer other   demigods. His strength was so great that the  devatas feared that he would soon rule the world.  

Rakshasas are rangers of the night, meaning they  assume various shapes at will and terrorize the   innocent. There is no one more innocent than  a priest, or a devotee of God. At the time,   the priests, or brahmanas, were living in the  forests and performing austerities. The Rakshasas  

Would sneak their way towards the sages, disrupt  their sacrifices, and then kill and eat them. It was also customary during this time for kings  to quarrel with one another. To the victor go   the spoils, and thus Ravana, after defeating many  kings in battle, would carry away their wives as  

A reward for himself. In this way, he managed to  marry so many of the most beautiful princesses in   the world. Yet simply by hearing of Sita’s grace  and beauty, he immediately forgot about the other   beautiful woman with whom he used to regularly  cavort. Ravana was warned, however, that he would  

Not be able to defeat Rama in battle or carry away  His wife while in His presence. Therefore, Ravana   set up a diversion whereby both Rama and Lakshmana  would leave Sita by herself in the cottage. Ravana’s diversion worked, as both  Rama and Lakshmana went chasing after  

Ravana’s Rakshasa friend, Maricha, who  had assumed the guise of a deer. Still,   Ravana knew he couldn’t approach Sita in his  original ghastly form, which consisted of ten   heads. Therefore he assumed the guise of  a mendicant and humbly approached Sita,   who was by herself. Sita Devi, who  was a perfect person in all regards,  

Immediately offered the brahmana some nice food  and a place to sit. Ravana then propositioned her,   and in response, Sita identified herself and gave  a brief summary of her current circumstances. Sita was a little disturbed by the mendicant’s  advances, so she made sure to quickly inform her  

Guest about her husband. From the above referenced  statement, we see that Sita identified Rama as   having all good qualities. Not only were these  statements of fact, but they were also intended   to let the brahmana know that there was no reason  for there to be any enmity or confrontation. In  

Essence, Sita was saying, “My husband possesses  all good qualities. He is a friend to all,   so He will certainly give you whatever you want.  There is no need for any hostility or any breaking   of the rules of propriety.” This message  applies not only to Ravana, but to all of us.

Sometimes bad things happen to us, and at the  same time, we see good things happen to others.   Sometimes even the impious seem to have everything  go right for them. In these instances, we may   become angry with God. “I’ve done everything the  right way for You, but I get nothing out of it.  

Others, who don’t even believe in You, acquire  wealth, fame, beauty, and prosperity. Why have   You abandoned me and rewarded the miscreants?”  From Ravana’s example, we see that the acquisition   of material wealth doesn’t necessarily mean  that God has granted any particular favors.

This particular scene in the Dandaka forest  makes for an interesting study. On one side,   we have Ravana, a miscreant who had no problem  killing sages and kidnapping women. He also   possessed extraordinary wealth and power. On  the other side, we have Sita and Lakshmana,  

Two of the most pious people to ever have lived.  Yet all that their dedication to dharma got them   was banishment from their kingdom of Ayodhya.  In essence, they were wandering around the   world like homeless people. So who was more  fortunate, Ravana or Sita and Lakshmana?

Obviously the correct answer is that Sita and  Lakshmana were more fortunate because they were   directly in God’s association. Ravana’s material  life was essentially a mirage, for he would lose   everything after he kidnapped Sita. Rama,  Lakshmana, Hanuman, and Sugriva’s army of  

Vanaras would eventually march to Lanka, destroy  the city, and kill Ravana in the process. Ravana   lived what appeared to be a charmed life, but  in the end, his uncontrolled senses did him in. God is certainly nice to us, and especially  to His devotees. Lord Chaitanya tells us that  

There is no difference between God and His  names and forms. This means that simply by   thinking of Krishna, or one of His  direct expansions like Lord Rama,   we get direct association with God. This  is the highest benediction in life. This  

Gift is so valuable that one cannot put  a price tag on it. As Sita Devi states,   God is of pure character. Those who regularly  associate with Him also become purified. In this   age, if we constantly chant, “Hare Krishna  Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare,  

Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”, we  can rest assured that God will always be with us. CHAPTER 5 – CURBING OUR PASSIONS “Being under the control of passion and  lust, Rama’s father, Maharaja Dasharatha,   wanted to fulfill Kaikeyi’s cherished  desire, thus he did not go through with  

Rama’s installation ceremony.” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.12) Being under the control of our passions is not  a good thing. Rather, we are supposed to be the   controllers of our senses and our actions; hence  the living entities are described as ishvara,  

Or controllers. God is the supreme controller,  thus He is also known as Ishvara and also as   Parameshvara. Param means great or supreme,  so when it is added as a prefix to ishvara,   it means that God is the greatest of  controllers. The Lord has two separate  

Energies, the superior and the inferior.  The modes of nature, which include passion,   are part of the material energy. The spirit  soul is meant to associate with the spiritual,   or superior, energy since that affords one  the protections offered by God. The inferior  

Energy offers no such protections, thus  it only brings misery, chaos, and despair. Associating with the material energy leaves us  subject to the dangers which lurk around every   corner. We see evidence of this in our day-to-day  lives. People can die at any moment. Even Olympic  

Athletes can meet with accidents and lose their  life, so what does that say about others who take   part in higher risk behavior. In fact, something  as simple as driving a car can be a very dangerous   activity, for thousands of people die each year in  traffic related accidents. Aside from the dangers  

That are caused by Mother Nature, there are  others that come about through our own activities.   Uncontrolled sex life is considered very dangerous  because it causes misery through our interactions   with others, and also self-inflicted  wounds coming from our mind and psyche.

Sometimes people wonder why romantic love is so  difficult. Especially around the holiday season   or Valentine’s Day, those who are single  wonder what it will take to find their soul   mate or their perfect match. In reality,  God intentionally made sex life difficult  

For human beings. This is because He has higher  goals for us. The human form of life represents   the most elevated of species because human beings  have the highest level of intelligence. There can   be many debates about who or what we consider  to be intelligent, but the Vedas tell us that  

The truly wise among us are those who understand  the difference between matter and spirit. Knowing   that spirit is different from matter is one thing,  but knowing who is the origin of both is another. The Vedas tell us that Lord Krishna, the  Supreme Personality of Godhead, is the origin  

Of everything. His impersonal feature of Brahman  represents the sum and substance of everything   in the world, including both matter and spirit.  God’s Paramatma feature goes one better because it   serves as the Supersoul residing within the heart  of every living entity. In His original feature,  

God is Bhagavan, or the Supreme Lord as a  person, i.e. an individual just like us. The   point of human life is to reconnect with God in  His Bhagavan feature. Those people who know how   to reconnect with Krishna are thus considered  intelligent. Book smarts and street smarts  

Can only take us so far. Even having a good  speaking ability really can only provide us   limited success. If anything, such personality  traits only serve to fool others into thinking   that we’re smart. Real intelligence is  that which brings us to serving Krishna.

Sex life is extremely painstaking because  God wants us to engage in His service.   If He wanted us to engage in unlimited  amounts of sex with multiple partners,   He would have put us in a different species.  The monkeys and dogs have insatiable appetites  

For sex. They don’t even have to worry  about seduction. They don’t think, “Ok,   how do I get this girl to like me? I will try to  compliment her, or I will send her flowers.” No,   the dogs just go up to whoever they want to  fornicate with and start their business. Sex  

Life is more complicated for us humans. Every  person has different desires and different   things that attract them to others. Even when  people do get together, there is more difficulty   in trying to keep the romantic spark, hence the  concept of “the chase is better than the catch”.

The Vedas tell us to not become slaves to  our passions, especially sex life. God is   the creator of this universe and millions of  others. His creating powers are in essence a   form of sex life. The romantic love we experience  here is actually a perverted form of the pure love  

That exists in the spiritual world. Our  pursuit of domination over women and our   desires to enjoy illicit sex stem from our  inherent desire to imitate God. God is God,   meaning that no one else can be Him no matter how  hard they try. God has always been and will always  

Continue to be God. The natural order of things  is for us spirit souls to act as His servants.   When we become ruled by our passions, we become  servants of the inferior energy. In a sense,   this is slavery of the worst kind,  and it can lead to disastrous results.

In the above referenced statement, Sita Devi is  explaining to Ravana how her husband, Lord Rama,   ended up being exiled from the kingdom of  Ayodhya. During the Treta Yuga, Lord Krishna   advented on earth as a pious prince named Rama,  born as the eldest son of the king of Ayodhya,  

Dasharatha. At the age of twenty-five, Rama  was all set to be installed as the new king,   but Dasharatha had to change his mind at the last  minute. Dasharatha was an extremely pious king,   a fact which should be quite obvious considering  that God Himself appeared as his son. Still,  

On a previous occasion, the king had promised  two boons of her choosing to his youngest wife,   Kaikeyi. Not only had Kaikeyi helped Dasharatha  out, but she was also his favorite wife. This was   due to her beauty. Kings live in the mode of  passion, thus the Vedas allowed them to have  

Multiple wives, provided that they were well cared  for and protected. Dasharatha had three wives,   but Kaikeyi was the youngest and  considered the most attractive. Dasharatha didn’t need to grant her any boons,  but he did so out of affection. When the time  

Came for Rama’s installation, Kaikeyi decided to  cash in on her boons. She insisted that Rama be   sent to the forest for fourteen years and that her  son, Bharata, be installed as king instead. Sita,   being married to Rama at the time, insisted on  accompanying her Lord, as did Rama’s younger  

Brother Lakshmana. While the group was staying  in the forest of Janasthana, the Rakshasa demon,   Ravana, appeared in front of Sita. Assuming the  guise of a mendicant, Ravana propositioned Sita.   Rama and Lakshmana were away from the cottage  due to a diversion that Ravana had created.

Sita immediately identified herself to the  person she thought was a mendicant. She gave   a description of her beloved husband Rama. In the  above referenced statement, Sita is making sure   that Ravana knows that Rama didn’t get exiled from  His kingdom through any fault of His own. Rather,  

It was due to Dasharatha’s weakness, caused by his  uncontrolled passions [kama-artah]. Essentially,   Sita is giving a warning to all of us that  we shouldn’t be too overly attached to sex   life. Life is meant for serving God, as she so  brilliantly exemplified through her actions.

Sita was a woman and therefore had no  formal training in Vedic teachings. However,   from the example set by her parents,  and through her service to Rama,   she picked up on all the major points. Her  knowledge of dharma was perfect. Though she  

Was a beautiful woman herself, she knew that  it was man’s duty to curb his sexual impulses,   and to remain steadfast on the path of dharma. So do the Vedas recommend that we completely  abstain from sex? No. If we’re able to completely  

Abstain then it’s good, but the Vedas tell us  that we can have sex, provided that we follow   religious principles. Actually this should be  the mindset we have when we carry out any of our   duties. The Vedas provide rules and regulations,  but they are not there just to punish us. Rather,  

These regulations help us curb our senses so that  we can better concentrate on learning about God,   and use that knowledge to serve Him. Sex life is  allowed, but only within the bounds of marriage,   and then only for the purpose of having  children. Any other kind of sex is considered  

Illicit and sinful. And why is it sinful?  Because it causes one to become further   bound to the cycle of birth and death. Some  religions believe that we only get one life,   while the Vedas tell us that we get as many lives  as we need to properly understand God. Regardless,  

If we have desires to associate  with the Lord’s inferior energy,   it’s safe to assume that we will go anywhere but  the supreme abode after our current life is over. So how do we curb our passions? The easiest  way is to take a positive approach. When  

It comes to religious life, the dos are more  important than the don’ts. It is recommended   that we stay committed to performing the  dos, and that through this commitment,   the don’ts will eventually take care of  themselves. So what are the dos? The aggregate  

Sum of all prescriptions relating to positive  spiritual activity is known as bhakti-yoga,   or devotional service. There  are nine distinct processes,   but the one most recommended for this age is  the constant chanting of the holy names of God,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare  Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”.

Sita Devi was an expert practitioner of  devotional service. She always thought   of Rama, surrendered everything to Him,  offered Him prayers, chanted His name,   served His lotus feet, and so much more. Rama’s  other close associates like Lakshmana and Hanuman   were also perfect devotees. Therefore they are  today worshiped together in what is known as  

The Rama Darbar. We certainly can’t imitate all  the wonderful activities performed by Sita Devi,   but we can follow the path she set. By keeping  our minds fixed on her lotus feet and the path of   devotion that she laid down, we can rest assured  that our passions will always be under control.

CHAPTER 6 – A COOL CUSTOMER “When Rama arrived before His father in  preparation for the installation ceremony,   Kaikeyi quickly addressed my husband with these  words, ‘O Raghava, just hear what Your father   previously proclaimed. This kingdom shall be  seamlessly given to Bharata. And You shall  

Undoubtedly have to remain in the forest for  fourteen years. Therefore, O Kakutstha, You   should proceed to the forest and save Your father  from untruthfulness.’ Thereupon Rama fearlessly   replied to Kaikeyi by saying ‘So be it’. Thus  my husband, with unflinching determination,  

Complied with her wishes.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.13-16)   Detachment allows us to take even the worst  news in stride. It is natural to feel anger   or sadness based on the events that occur in  our lives. Sometimes people will be hesitant  

To tell us something, for they know it will  cause us great grief. Those who are cool and   collected can handle any turn of events without a  problem. This is because they possess detachment,   and they understand the temporary nature of  things. Of all the cool customers, no one is more  

Detached than God. Part of being Bhagavan means  You possess the quality of renunciation to the   fullest degree. The Lord put this feature on full  display during His time on earth as Lord Rama. God is in need of nothing. There is a famous verse  in the Shrimad Bhagavatam that describes the Lord  

As being atmarama. Lord Chaitanya provided a  multitude of purports to this one verse, but the   most commonly accepted meaning of atmarama is one  who is self-satisfied. Atma can refer to the soul,   body, or mind, but most of the time it refers  to the soul. Rama means one who gives pleasure,  

So atmarama means one who derives pleasure  from the soul. The soul is often referred   to as the self because it forms the  basis of our identity. Our arms, hands,   and legs are only temporary coverings. We see  that even if a person loses a limb in an accident,  

Their identity remains intact. Therefore we  can conclude that our identity surely can’t   be taken from any of our body parts. In fact,  the famous king, Rishabhadeva, stated that any   person who associates with their own body,  which is made up of blood, puss, and stool,  

Must be considered to have the intelligence of  an animal, and more specifically that of an ass. God is the supreme soul, Paramatma. Everything in  this world is created by Him. Though the living   entities, jivatmas, never take birth nor do  they die, they also are part and parcel of God,  

Representing one of His separated expansions.  Since the Lord creates everything, He is not in   need of anything, especially self-aggrandizement  or material fortunes. Due to His kind nature and   pleasing smile, the Lord is loved and adored by  everyone in the spiritual world. On the supreme  

Planet of Goloka Vrindavana, Lord Krishna, the  original form of God, is happily engaged with   His gopas and gopis all day long. If one were to  watch television cartoon shows on the weekends,   they would see a simple life depicted where the  main characters spend all their day playing,  

Not worrying about any big issues.  Life in Vrindavana is similar to this,   because everyone is in constant association with  Krishna. Some are playing with Him in the field,   some are having lunch with Him, and others are  enjoying with Him in the mood of romantic love.

To rescue the fallen souls, the Lord appears  on earth from time to time. This doesn’t mean   that He leaves the spiritual world, but rather He  expands Himself as an avatara. An avatara is one   who descends, thus the term refers to God since  He descends from the spiritual world to help His  

Devotees. When God comes to earth, He doesn’t  broadcast His divinity to everyone. This may   seem strange at first. “He’s God after all. Why  wouldn’t He just identify Himself?” This can be   explained by studying the concept of free will.  We living entities are part and parcel of God,  

But we still have a minute amount of  independence. We don’t have control   over how events will pan out, but we do have  the freedom to choose how our senses will   interact with nature. There are three energies  at work in this world: the inferior, superior,  

And the marginal. By acting in the interests  of the senses, we associate with the inferior   energy. By acting in God’s interests, we  come in contact with the superior energy.   Since the choice is ours, the living entities  technically belong to the marginal energy.

The Lord comes to rescue those who want to  associate with the superior [spiritual] energy,   but have trouble doing so because of  the condition of society at the time.   The Lord also doesn’t disclose His  identity because He doesn’t want to  

Force anyone to love Him. The Vedas tell  us that the meaning of life is to know,   understand, and love God. This pure  love for God, known as Krishna-prema,   enables one to return to the spiritual world after  death. The act of sexual assault certainly can’t  

Be classified as love since the woman is forced  into sexual activity. In a similar manner, if God   forced us to serve and love Him, our feelings  towards Him couldn’t be classified as prema. So how do we tell who are the bona fide  incarnations? The authoritative scriptures, such  

As the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and Puranas, give  a detailed list of every major incarnation that   has ever appeared or will appear in the future.  Even the Lord Buddha avatara was predicted in the   Shrimad Bhagavatam almost five thousand years ago.  Lord Chaitanya, Krishna’s most recent incarnation,  

Never openly declared Himself to be God. Many  people realized His divinity and would openly   praise Him, but the Lord would always cover His  ears, for He wanted to be known as a devotee of   Radha-Krishna and nothing else. On rare occasions  and in private, Lord Chaitanya would disclose  

His true identity as a combined incarnation of  Radha-Krishna, but such displays were reserved   for His confidential devotees. There are many  people who claim to be God, but we can use Lord   Chaitanya’s example and the statements  of scriptures to decipher for ourselves.

One of Krishna’s most famous incarnations was Lord  Rama, who appeared on earth during the Treta Yuga,   or the second time period of creation. One of  the more notable incidents in Rama’s life was   His banishment to the forest for fourteen years.  Born as the eldest son of the king of Ayodhya,  

Maharaja Dasharatha, Rama lived the  regal life. He had every material   opulence available at His fingertips. He  would wake up every day to the sound of   mrdangas playing and well-wishers chanting  His name. When He was exiled to the forest,  

He had to give up everything. Essentially,  He went from being a prince to a pauper. In the above referenced statement, Sita Devi, Lord  Rama’s wife, is describing the events that led to   the exile. She is speaking to the Rakshasa demon,  Ravana, who had approached her in the guise of a  

Mendicant. Sita, Rama, and Lakshmana were residing  in the forest of Janasthana. At Sita’s request,   Rama and Lakshmana went to chase after a deer  which was actually a Rakshasa in disguise. Ravana,   in the guise of a brahmana, approached  Sita and propositioned her. Sita then   identified herself and described  the glories of her husband, Rama.

The idea for Rama’s exile actually came from  Dasharatha’s youngest wife Kaikeyi. She wanted   her son, Bharata, to be the king and thought  that things would be easier with Rama out of   the way. In her telling of the story, we  see that Sita put special emphasis on the  

Fact that Rama fearlessly replied to Kaikeyi  that He would have no problem renouncing the   kingdom and going to the forest. Kaikeyi  was expecting a disagreement to arise,   for Dasharatha himself was heartbroken over the  idea of Rama’s exile. But as mentioned before,  

God is atmarama, so He is not attached to the  post of king or any other material opulence. So how do we acquire the same level of  renunciation? How do we become atmarama? Well,   there are many ways to achieve this goal, but  the easiest method for this age is the constant  

Chanting of the holy names of God, “Hare Krishna  Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare   Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. The secret  is to develop detachment through attachment. If   we first rekindle our natural love for God,  it will be much easier to remain unaffected  

By the ups and downs of everyday life. Lord Rama  remained steady and calm because had a job to do,   namely that of protecting the sages living in  the forest and destroying the Rakshasa demons,   headed by Ravana. In a similar manner, if we  remain steady on the path of devotional service,  

We will be performing the highest form of yoga.  Yoga means linking of our consciousness with the   Supreme Consciousness. The Supreme Consciousness  is God, and through Him we can achieve anything. CHAPTER 7 – AN UNBREAKABLE VOW “Rama always gives in charity but never  takes any. He always speaks the truth and  

Never tells a lie. O brahmana, this is  Rama’s highest vow and He is incapable   of deviating from it.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.17) A hero is a person who stands up to help others,  even under the most difficult circumstances.  

When the chips are down, a hero is a person you  can count on to save the day. A hero is brave,   fearless, and ever committed to the welfare  of others. In this regard, Lord Rama,   an incarnation of God who appeared  on earth many thousands of years ago,  

Can correctly be identified as a hero.  Lord Rama was at His best when the going   got tough. He was often put to the test,  but it was never enough to bring Him down. In the above referenced statement, Sita Devi,  Lord Rama’s wife, is describing His virtues to  

The demon Ravana. At the time, Rama, Sita, and His  younger brother, Lakshmana, were residing in the   forest of Janasthana. Lord Rama was the son of a  king, but through an unfortunate series of events,   He was banished from His kingdom. Sita and  Lakshmana insisted on accompanying Him on  

His sojourn through the forest. Ravana was a  Rakshasa demon. He appeared in front of Sita in   the guise of a brahmana, so as to fool her into  letting her guard down. Ravana had many wives,   but after he heard of Sita’s beauty, he  had to have her. He set up a diversion  

Whereby Rama and Lakshmana were lured  away from the group’s cottage. Ravana,   while in the guise of a mendicant, used this  opportunity to approach Sita and proposition her. Sita was a little taken aback upon first  seeing the brahmana. She had just yelled  

At Lakshmana to go check on Rama, so she was  already a little flustered. At the same time,   Sita was a highly pious person, so she knew  that etiquette called for her to receive the   brahmana in a welcoming fashion. Sita obliged  by first offering the brahmana food, water,  

And a nice place to sit. Ravana took advantage of  her kindness by propositioning her. Normally, Sita   would have chastised a person for speaking that  way. She was completely devoted to Rama after all,   and she never even thought of another man. Yet she  knew that it wasn’t right to yell at a brahmana,  

Or priest. Thus she decided to kindly identify  herself. In so doing, she described the virtues   of her husband. In the above referenced statement,  she makes special note of Rama’s defining virtuous   characteristics. In case the brahmana had any  other intentions, Sita made sure to inform him  

That her husband was brave and courageous.  Rama would be coming back at any moment,   so the brahmana should know that Rama would defend  and protect Sita under any and all circumstances. From the first part of Sita’s description, we  see that Rama always gave in charity and never  

Took any for Himself. Giving in charity is an  obvious sign of chivalry and virtue. Charity   means voluntarily sacrificing one’s possessions  and wealth for the benefit of those in need. The   Vedas give us a more concrete definition of  charity than what we normally take it to be.  

In the Vedic tradition, charity should only  be given to brahmanas, or priests. Brahmanas   engage in specific activities such as reading  the Vedas, teaching Vedic wisdom to others,   performing sacrifices, teaching others how to  perform sacrifices, and accepting charity. Since  

They generally don’t earn a living on their own,  their lifestyle is very meager. They rely on the   charity of others to survive. Not only do they  accept charity, but they are completely deserving   of it. Since all of their activities are religious  in nature, they don’t have time to go out and earn  

A living. Therefore it is the duty of others in  society to take care of their needs. This rule   especially applied to kings. The kshatriyas, or  warrior class, were the rulers of society. They   acted as the government, and their primary duty  was to provide protection to others. In terms of  

The body, the kshatriyas can be thought of as  the arms. The arms do more than just protect,   however, for they can perform certain Vedic  sacrifices and also give away charity to others. Lord Rama used to give very generously in charity.  In fact, just before leaving for the forest,  

Both He and Sita gave away all of their most  valuable possessions to the brahmanas. One   brahmana in particular was shy about asking Lord  Rama for charity. At the insistence of his wife,   the brahmana went and approached Lord  Rama. The Lord was so pleased to see  

The brahmana that He asked him to throw a  rod as far as he could. To the brahmana,   Rama would give away as many cows as would  occupy the land between the spot where the   rod was launched and where it would land.  Even after the sage threw the rod, Lord  

Rama laughed and said that He was only joking,  and that He would give the brahmana whatever He   wanted. The brahmana was satisfied with the  cows given to him, and thus went away happy. This was the standard etiquette adhered to  by all the pious kings of the past. Brahmanas  

Give us so much valuable information.  Brahmana means one who knows Brahman,   the impersonal effulgence feature of  the Supreme Lord. Everything is Brahman,   thus one who understands it knows that  there is no difference between living   entities. Every person is a spirit soul at  their core, so there is no reason to use  

Unnecessary violence towards others. Brahmanas  teach others how to realize Brahman, meaning   they teach others about the non-dual nature of  things, and how there is a difference between   matter and spirit. Those who know Brahman have a  better chance of understanding its source: God.

Lord Rama also never took in charity. The Lord  appeared during the Treta Yuga, or the second   time period of creation. Some calculations  say that this occurred millions of years ago,   while others say it was many thousands of years  ago. Either way, it was certainly a long time ago,  

And the governments operated a little differently  than they do today. Regardless of the time period,   however, all governments are similar with  respect to tax collection. A government   needs operating revenue, which can only come  through the levying of taxes, tariffs, and  

Fees. The kingdom which Lord Rama presided over,  Ayodhya, certainly taxed its citizens, but this   cannot be considered the acceptance of charity.  Charity involves voluntarily giving up money and   possessions. Taxes involve coercion, which can  be thought of as a forced form of charity. If  

Governments properly provide protection, this  taxation, in a limited form, is justified. For a kshatriya to accept charity is considered  a bad thing because, as mentioned before,   charity is only intended for brahmanas. The  Vedas tell us that all our material activities  

Involve karma, meaning there are reactions  to everything that we do. This includes the   area of charity. For example, if we give  money to a homeless person on the street,   and they in turn use that money to buy drugs  or alcohol, we really haven’t done anything  

Worthwhile for that person. In some respects,  we have only made their life worse. The Vedas   tell us that all charitable giving should be  performed with these considerations in mind.   If we give money to someone who is not worthy of  it, we are actually committing a sin. The sin also  

Applies to the person accepting the charity.  Thus Rama was completely pure in all respects,   for He knew He wasn’t worthy of others’  charity, and thus never accepted it. Sita declared that part of Rama’s  unbreakable vow was His commitment  

To telling the truth. This is certainly a rarity  for the government leaders of today. In America,   most politicians are lawyers by trade, thus they  are skilled at cheating the law and using word   jugglery to their advantage. This isn’t to say  that lawyers are bad people, but rather they are  

Required to be good at certain things in order  to do their job well. This includes being able   to bend and shape the text of laws to give them  new meanings. Politicians are so good at lying   and twisting words, that people have come up  with a term for the practice: political spin.

Political parties practice spin tactics all the  time. In America, the most watched political   news shows each week are the Sunday morning  talk shows. Between 8 am and noon on Sundays,   each major network has a talk show dedicated  to covering the biggest news items of the week.  

These shows feature guests and have roundtable  discussions with expert panelists. The guests   on these shows are always major political  figures; either people running for office,   current office holders, or even the  President of the United States. Many times,   the same guest appears on each show so as  to not show favoritism to any particular  

Network. And what is the purpose of going on  these shows? To distribute political spin,   of course. Each party sends out “talking  points” to their members during the week.   These talking points stress certain ideas and  buzz words to be used when being interviewed.  

Thus members of both political parties end up all  sounding alike. A President can do four different   interviews on one particular day and end up  giving the same answers to each interviewer. Lord Rama was not like this. He was dedicated  to the truth. It was His commitment to honesty  

That led Him to the forest. Rama’s father, King  Dasharatha, previously promised two boons to his   youngest wife, Queen Kaikeyi. After Kaikeyi  asked for Rama’s banishment to the forest,   Dasharatha was thinking about reneging on his  promises. Rama knew that if the king did this,  

He would be committing a great sin. In  order to protect His father’s reputation,   and that of the Ikshvaku dynasty, Rama insisted  on serving out the fourteen year exile term.   Even after Dasharatha passed away later on,  Rama still refused to go back to the kingdom,  

For He believed that Dasharatha’s commitment  to the truth didn’t end after his death. Lord Rama was an ideal man, husband, older  brother, father, and king. More than anything   else, He is a hero that we can look up to and  worship, for He is God after all. We are the  

Intended beneficiaries of Rama’s heroism. We  spirit souls are swimming in this ocean of   nescience and hopelessly looking for a way out.  Lord Rama, in the form of His holy name, is the   life raft that can safely carry us to shore. Those  who constantly recite the sacred formula, “Hare  

Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare Hare,  Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”, are   assured of being rescued and taken  back to the spiritual world. CHAPTER 8 – DESTROYER OF FOES “Lakshmana, who is His [Rama’s] brother from  a different mother, is very powerful. That  

Tiger among men is Rama’s assistant and the  destroyer of enemies in battle. His brother   named Lakshmana follows the Vedic principles with  firm determination. Carrying a bow in his hand,   he has renounced his home in order to  follow Rama along with myself.” (Sita   Devi speaking to Ravana, Valmiki  Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.18-19)

These statements were uttered by Sita Devi under  very trying circumstances, but we see that she   never missed an opportunity to praise Rama, or His  younger brother Lakshmana. In the Vedic tradition,   the wife of an elder brother is treated with  reverence. She is known as bhabhi in Hindi,  

And the younger siblings touch her feet  and honor her since she is considered to   be equal to the elder brother. The Vedas  teach us to view all women in society,   except our own wives, as our mothers.  This is a nice system that ensures that  

Women are protected, which in turn  leads to a successful family life. Sita Devi was the wife of Lord Rama, one  of God’s incarnations on earth who appeared   many thousands of years ago in Ayodhya. Sita  Devi was a person of worship for Lakshmana,  

But we see from Sita’s example that she viewed  Lakshmana to be equal in strength and valor to   her husband. Rama and Lakshmana were like one,  for Lakshmana was an incarnation of Ananta Shesha   Naga, the serpent carrier of Lord Vishnu in the  spiritual world. Lakshmana was more than just a  

Great brother, he was Lord Rama’s support  system. In her description of Lakshmana,   Sita Devi informs us about the qualities that  exist in a perfect devotee of God. The Vedas   tell us that the aim of human life is to  forge a bond of pure love with the Supreme  

Lord. This relationship with God will enable us  to return to His spiritual world after death. The relationships we form over the course of our  lifetime are all checked to some degree. Amorous   love requires the other party to reciprocate  our feelings; otherwise there is no question  

Of a relationship. Real love means wanting more  for the other person than you want for yourself.   The closest thing to a pure loving relationship  is the one that exists between parents and their   children. Mothers especially form a tight  bond with their children since they are the  

Ones who carry them in the womb for nine months  and then nurse them through the early years. It   is somewhat of a thankless task, however. All the  nurturing and love shown to the child during the   early years gets quickly forgotten once the child  grows older. A good parent wants their children  

To grow up to be self-sufficient and independent.  Yet this independence means that the services of   the parents will eventually no longer be needed.  This is a tough pill to swallow. Children don’t   truly appreciate the love shown to them by their  parents until they have children of their own.

The pure relationship with God is similar to  the parent-child paradigm in that there is   no expectation of reciprocation. A loving parent  will always stand by their children, irrespective   of whether the children stray from the path of  righteousness or remain pious. Pure devotees  

Of God are similar in this regard. They execute  bhakti-yoga, or devotional service, without any   expectation of reciprocation. In reality, God can  never leave His devotees hanging, but the bhaktas   nevertheless don’t expect or demand anything from  the Lord. Sometimes life can seem to be unfair and  

In these instances, we may have a tendency to  blame God. “I’ve always worshiped You, and I’ve   always stayed true to the path of dharma, yet  nothing seems to go right for me. If You really   loved me, You wouldn’t let this happen.” Neophyte  devotees sometimes adopt this line of thinking.

Advanced devotees don’t ask for ascension to the  heavenly planets or even material opulence. They   only wish to always think of the Supreme Lord,  wherever they may be. Dhruva Maharaja is a great   example in this regard. As a young boy, he  went to the forest to perform austerities  

So that his father’s kingdom would be  bequeathed to him. After a long time,   Lord Vishnu finally appeared in front of  the boy. Dhruva was so overwhelmed that he   completely forgot why he had gone to the forest in  the first place. Vishnu asked him what he wanted,  

And Dhruva replied that he only wanted to think of  the Lord and serve Him for the rest of His life. Lakshmana was exactly the same way. Lord Rama took  birth as the eldest son of the King of Ayodhya,   Maharaja Dasharatha, and his wife Queen Kausalya.  The Lord had three younger brothers born to  

Dasharatha’s two other wives, Sumitra and Kaikeyi.  Lakshmana was born to Sumitra and thus was often   referred to as Saumitra. Lakshmana was attached  to Rama right from their childhood. He loved Rama   without any motive or desire. He didn’t think  of Rama as an order supplier or protector. On  

The contrary, Lakshmana viewed himself as  Rama’s protector. When the Lord was ordered   to spend fourteen years living in the forest as  an exile, Lakshmana insisted on coming along. “By my truth, by my bow, by my acts of  sacrifice, and by my acts of charity  

Do I swear this to you, O queen. If Rama  should enter a blazing fire or a forest,   you should know for certain that I would enter  it before Him.” (Lakshmana speaking to Kausalya,   Valmiki Ramayana, Ayodhya Kand, 21.16-17) Sita, being a perfect devotee herself, also  insisted on accompanying Rama during His  

Exile. While the group was staying in the  forest of Janasthana, the Rakshasa demon   Ravana set up a diversion whereby Rama and  Lakshmana were lured away from the cottage,   leaving Sita all by herself. Ravana  used this opportunity to approach  

The princess while he was in the guise of a  mendicant. In the above referenced statement,   Sita is replying to advances made by Ravana,  whom Sita had taken to be a brahmana. Sita started off by identifying herself and giving  a brief description of Rama. Next she went on to  

Extol the virtues of Lakshmana. She not only  loved praising Rama and Lakshmana, but she also   wanted to let the brahmana know that she was well  protected. Not only were Rama and Lakshmana great   protectors, but they were the epitomes of virtue  as well. This was important because Sita wanted  

To let the brahmana know that there was no reason  for him to have any enmity with the two brothers. Sita describes Lakshmana as the destroyer of  foes. Lakshmana was extremely powerful, but   he only used that power for good. Ravana was also  very powerful, but he used his strength to attack  

The innocent. Lakshmana was God’s protector, so  he only used his powers as part of his service   to God. There is no higher form of dharma  than this. Dharma means an occupational duty,   or religion. There are different types  of dharmas based on time, circumstance,  

And a person’s social status or qualities. The  highest dharma is known as bhagavata-dharma,   or devotional service. This is the  religion that Lakshmana practiced. Sita also makes mention of the fact that Lakshmana  was dedicated to following religious principles   with determination. This means that he  wasn’t attached to his power. Rather,  

He viewed service to Rama as his only business  in life. Thus he automatically possessed the   qualities of renunciation and simplicity.  Lakshmana understood that religion was the true   aim of life, so he didn’t shy away from performing  religious austerities. While living in the woods,  

Lakshmana would stay awake at night and stand  guard while Sita and Rama were sleeping. There   are many kinds of prescribed austerities  and religious sacrifices which aim to   provide various material rewards. Lakshmana’s  performance of tapasya and yajna was perfect  

Because he did it only to please Rama. By always  being in direct contact with the Supreme Lord,   Lakshmana was a maha-bhagavata, which meant  he automatically acquired all good qualities. The qualities possessed by Lakshmana  are the characteristics that we should   strive to acquire. We too can be  the destroyer of foes. In this age,  

Almost all of society is either godless or  they view the Lord as an order supplier. The   greatest foe is irreligion, which we can  easily destroy with logic and reason. By   regularly chanting the maha-mantra, “Hare  Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna,  

Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama,  Hare Hare”, we can not only get closer to God,   but we can arouse God consciousness in others. The  key is to chant this mantra regularly and loudly,   for the atheists and impersonalist philosophers  get quite irritated hearing the holy name of  

The Lord. In this age, God incarnates through  His holy name, thus the process of sankirtana,   or congregational chanting, is equally as potent  in defeating demons as mundane weapons are. We can also take up religion with  firm determination by abstaining   from the four pillars of sinful life:  meat eating, gambling, illicit sex,  

And intoxication. If we follow these  guidelines, we can work our way towards   becoming maha-bhagavatas. We’ll also be  setting a good example for others to follow. CHAPTER 9 – RAJA RISHI “Because Rama is firmly resolute and  eternally dedicated to dharma, He,  

Wearing matted hair and assuming the form of an  ascetic, has entered the forest of Dandaka along   with me and His brother.” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.20) In this statement, Sita Devi is  explaining how she, her husband Rama,  

And His younger brother Lakshmana ended up  residing in the forest. At the time, a demon,   in the guise of a brahmana, was visiting  her hermitage. This demon, named Ravana,   propositioned her while both Rama and Lakshmana  were away. Sita took the opportunity to identify  

Herself and also to extol the virtues of  her husband and brother-in-law. Lord Rama,   an incarnation of God, was very famous  at the time, so it seemed quite strange   that He would take up residence in the  woods, for He was the son of a king.

Being royalty, Sita and Rama were accustomed to  living the high life. In their kingdom of Ayodhya,   the couple would awake to the sound of mrdangas  playing and people chanting Vedic hymns. Rama’s   father was Maharaja Dasharatha, the king  of Ayodhya. As the eldest son of the king,  

Rama enjoyed great popularity and had every  material comfort available to Him. His wife,   Sita, was the most exalted of princesses  and was also loved and adored by all. We see that in today’s society, royalty and  high class people enjoy similar treatment.  

Government officials in America have the best  perks. Sitting Presidents are closely guarded   at all times by the Secret Service. The  commander in chief has trusted aides who   handle all of their day-to-day affairs.  Even when a President leaves office,  

He enjoys Secret Service protection for the  rest of his life. A pension is also included,   along with the best healthcare coverage in the  world. In fact, all members of Congress can choose   from some of the best healthcare plans in the  country. Pay increases are regularly enacted. Not  

Only are most of a Congressman’s expenses paid  for by either the government or by lobbyists,   but a large annual salary adds to the perks.  Once they leave office, government officials   often land high paying jobs as lobbyists  or as political analysts on television.

In Vedic times, kings also enjoyed perks  that weren’t necessarily available to the   rest of society. However, their lavish  lifestyle was deemed justified due to the   protection they provided. The Vedas often  refer to saintly kings as raja-rishis,   meaning kings who are devoted and pious. The  first king on earth was Maharaja Ikshvaku,  

The son of Manu, who incidentally was the first  man on earth. In the Bhagavad-gita, Lord Krishna   tells Arjuna that He first imparted Vedic wisdom  to the sun-god, Vivasvan, who in turn passed it   down to Manu. Manu then taught Ikshvaku, who then  passed on that legacy to all his descendants. Lord  

Rama took birth in the family line of Ikshvaku,  thus He was firmly dedicated to dharma and piety. The Vedas tell us that in addition to providing  protection to society, a king should act as God’s   representative on earth. This doesn’t mean that  the king is God, but rather he is to be treated as  

Good as God. Formerly the brahmanas, or priests,  were the highest class of men in society, but the   kshatriya kings were also treated to be as good  as God because they acted piously. They knew their   limitations, thus they took counsel on all matters  from the brahmanas. This shows how a society can  

Function properly. Not every person has to engage  in the same occupation. This is not possible   because everyone has different qualities they are  born with and different desires they want to act   upon. As long as one follows the directions of a  bona fide brahmana, they will be acting piously.

We see that today’s leaders run into  trouble because instead of acting as   God’s representatives, they try to pretend  to be God themselves. This is because they   don’t have any belief in a higher power. They take  themselves to be the smartest people in the world,  

Part of an elite stock. They view the common man  as a peon, someone who is too stupid to know what   is good for him. Thus they enact policies which  force the common folk into becoming dependent on   the government. In this system, the leaders  get to pretend to be controllers of society,  

Thereby fulfilling their desire to imitate God.  The miscreant leaders of today choose winners   and losers in the economic system,  divide up land based on ethnicity,   all the while exempting themselves  from the rules they impose on others. If someone doesn’t believe in God and  tries to act as God to everyone else,  

They are committing the most grievous of sins.  In fact, the root cause of life in the material   world is mankind’s desire to imitate God. By  challenging the authority of the Supreme Lord,   a person inherits all bad qualities.  This was the case with Ravana. Though  

Technically he was a great devotee at heart,  Ravana played the role of an avowed atheist.   He performed many great austerities in hopes  of pleasing the demigods. The Vedas tell us   that God is one and that His original form  is that of Lord Shri Krishna. Krishna then  

Takes unlimited personal expansions known as  vishnu-tattva. All other expansions of the Lord,   including the living entities, are separated  expansions, meaning they are subordinate to God. The demigods are included in the list of separated  expansions. They are highly elevated living  

Entities who are in charge of managing the affairs  of the material world. The material world is part   of God’s inferior energy, thus the Lord can never  directly associate with it. Since the creation   needs day-to-day management and someone to handle  maintenance and destruction, the Lord gives charge  

To the demigods. Unlike the Supreme Lord, the  demigods are required to grant boons to anyone   who pleases them, regardless of their motives.  Ravana took advantage of this loophole by pleasing   Lord Brahma and Lord Shiva. The boons they gave  him allowed Ravana to amass great wealth, fame,  

And power. Yet just like the modern day leaders,  he had no belief in a higher power. He thought   the demigods were the most powerful living  entities, and by tricking them into giving   him boons, Ravana thought he had surpassed  everyone in the world in power and strength.

If a person does believe in God and becomes  His devotee, then, unlike with the miscreants,   they will inherit all good qualities. Lord Rama  was not only an incarnation of Lord Krishna,   but a pious kshatriya prince. He set the example  for good government and proper conduct. In  

Performing His duties as the eldest son of the  king, Rama played the role of a raja-rishi.   Devotees of God realize that all living entities  are equal at their core. Unlike God’s challengers,   the devotees realize that the body is temporary  and that the spirit soul inside the body is  

Eternal and unchanging. Realizing that all  living entities are equal, devotees treat   every person with respect and humility. Rama’s  behavior was a great example of this. Lakshmana   once remarked how no one could find any fault  with Rama, even those He had punished. This is  

Quite a striking statement, for one would expect  criminals to be angry with those who prosecute   them. But everyone knew that Rama didn’t play  favorites and that He wasn’t puffed up with power. Lord Rama’s humility and dedication to  dharma would be tested on the eve of His  

Coronation as king. Dasharatha decided  Rama would succeed him on the throne,   but at the last minute, he ordered his  son to leave the kingdom and not return   for fourteen years. Modern day leaders would  be outraged by such a thought. In America,  

Some Senators serve more than thirty years  in office. If it wasn’t for the twenty-second   amendment to the Constitution which limits  Presidents to serving two terms, most Presidents   would also remain in office indefinitely, as  was the case with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But Lord Rama wasn’t like this.  He was dedicated to dharma,  

Which dictated that a pious father should  always be listened to. It is especially   important for a king to set a good example,  otherwise the citizens will follow his bad   example. Rama never asked someone to do  something He Himself wasn’t willing to do.  

This is the true test of a spiritual master.  The great devotees of God are referred to as   acharyas because they teach by example. Lord  Rama gladly accepted the exile punishment,   taking both Sita and Lakshmana along with Him, for  they refused to remain in the kingdom without Him.

There are many lessons to learn here, the most  important of which is that we should never try to   be God. It is a futile attempt anyway since God is  not a title that someone can assume or relinquish.  

God is always God; He was God in the past and  will remain so in the future. As living entities,   we are meant to be His energy, or His pleasure  potency expansions. We can only give Him pleasure   by engaging in loving devotional service.  Sita, Rama, and Lakshmana showed us the way  

By always remaining dedicated to dharma.  Dharma means righteousness, religiosity,   or occupational duty. The dichotomy between Rama  and Ravana illustrates how drastic the difference   is between dharma and adharma. Ravana chose the  path of adharma and eventually lost everything.   His death was quite painful, whereas Rama and  His associates abided by dharma and were duly  

Rewarded. In this day and age, an occupational  duty we all can adopt is bhagavata-dharma.   This dharma can be easily practiced by becoming  devotees of God and regularly chanting His names,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare  Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. CHAPTER 10 – ANUVRATA

“I am faithfully engaged in the service of  Rama, who is as immovable as a great mountain,   as great a lord as Mahendra [Indra], and  who, like a great ocean, is incapable   of being agitated.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.33)

Lord Rama, the Supreme Personality of  Godhead, cannot be shaken or flustered   in any way. God is atmarama, meaning one who is  Self-satisfied. He cannot be defeated, moved,   or agitated by the miscreants. This is the  very definition of God. The purport of Sita’s  

Statement is that not only is God immoveable,  but so are those who depend on Him. Sita Devi,   being Rama’s wife, surrendered herself  completely to the care and protection   of the Supreme Lord, and thus was able  to remain steady on the virtuous path.

All of us are dependent on someone or  something, even though we may not know   it. Children are dependent on their parents.  Parents are also dependent on their children   because the sons and daughters take over the  lives of the parents. Lovers are dependent on  

Their paramours. We see that the strongest  type of depression occurs after a breakup   or a divorce. Unrequited love causes pain to  the heart. Thus even in loving relationships,   there is a full surrender of feelings  and emotions to the other person.

Since economic development, or artha, is required  for society to function, we see that many of us   are dependent on our bosses and the companies  that we work for. Even the CEOs and company   leaders aren’t independent, for they rely on the  general public to purchase their products and  

Services. Government leaders rely on the advice  and consent of other officials in government,   along with their trusted staff. Since the largest  governments of the world today are democracies,   the leaders become dependent on the voting  public. One small mistake or misstep can  

Lead to a revolt from the constituents, who can  kick people out of office come election time. On the surface, such dependence isn’t bad since we  all must serve someone or something. We run into   problems, however, since none of the objects  of our service is perfect. This means that  

The protection they provide to their dependents is  also flawed. We can use the recent economic crisis   to illustrate this point. In the capitalist  system, jobs are created through competition.   A person has a good or service that they wish  to sell to others in a peaceable and voluntary  

Manner. The more products and services a person  sells, the greater profit they will turn, which   is the reason they are in business to begin with.  Many of us think that companies exist to provide   a decent wage and health benefits, but that is not  the case. A company is in business for one reason:  

To turn a profit. All of us, being God’s children,  have an equal right to pursue happiness. As a   result, it is rare to see only one company for a  particular industry. Usually many new companies   spring into existence who also want to turn a  profit offering similar services and goods. This  

Results in competition. The same company that  had the market cornered on a specific product   or service must now deal with competitors. To  maintain revenue stream and profit margins,   companies look for ways to increase productivity;  hence they hire workers. Competing companies then  

Follow suit, and you eventually end up with  what we have today – thousands of companies,   both large and small, employing  millions of workers around the world. Even the largest companies, which are publicly  traded and bring in millions of dollars in revenue  

Each year, are subject to success and defeat. The  buying and selling habits of consumers are always   changing, meaning that a company can quickly go  from turning a profit to turning a loss. In recent   times, there has been a worldwide recession,  where the overall output of goods and services  

Has declined sharply. As a result, companies  have been forced to cut costs. In most companies,   the largest expense comes from labor, i.e. the  workforce. When it comes time to tighten the belt,   the workers are the first ones to  suffer, through layoffs and firings.

Anyone who has ever held a job for a long time  will tell you that being let go is not a good   feeling. Having a job means having a steady source  of income, which results in a sense of security in  

Life. When layoffs occur, this security gets swept  away. People are then left to either look for   new jobs, or beg the government for help. In this  way, we see that no matter how wealthy someone is,   or how successful they are materially, they  can never be considered infallible or perfect.

In the Vedic tradition, God is one, but  He has many different names based on His   innumerable features and characteristics. One  of His names is Achyuta, meaning infallible,   someone who never falls down. In the famous  Bhagavad-gita, the great warrior, Arjuna,   often addresses Lord Krishna as Achyuta.  This title can only apply to God because  

He is perfect in every respect. He is  the original proprietor of everything;   someone completely independent. Since He is the  only person that is perfect, it means that He   is the only entity that we should completely  surrender to. He never suffers through loss or  

Gain, thus His protection is always perfect.  God is unshakeable and so are His devotees. This fact was on full display many thousands  of years ago in the Dandaka forest. Lord   Krishna had incarnated on earth as Lord Rama,  a pious prince and son of the king of Ayodhya,  

Maharaja Dasharatha. While Rama, His brother  Lakshmana, and His wife Sita Devi were residing   in the forest of Dandaka, they were visited by the  Rakshasa demon Ravana. The demon’s trusted aide,   Maricha, appeared first in front of Rama’s  cottage in the guise of a deer. At Sita’s  

Request, Rama went chasing after the deer, and  Lakshmana soon followed. This left Ravana free   to approach Sita. The demon knew that Sita was  kind-hearted, especially to the saintly class.   Taking advantage of this, Ravana assumed the guise  of a mendicant and thus approached Sita and begged  

Her for alms. After Sita welcomed him, Ravana  propositioned her. Sita politely declined and,   at the same time, identified herself and explained  to the brahmana that her husband was Lord Rama.   She told him that Rama was ever-dedicated to the  welfare of the saintly class and that there was  

No reason for the mendicant to harbor any  ill-feelings towards Him or His relatives. Ravana couldn’t stand to hear Rama and Lakshmana  being praised in this way, so he finally gave up   his act and revealed himself. This time, he  openly declared his intention to have Sita as  

His wife. In the above referenced quote, Sita is  sternly rebuking the demon by telling him that   she is a dependent of Rama. And who is Rama?  Well, Sita explains that Rama is someone as   strong as a mountain and resilient as an ocean.  A mountain is so large that no one can think of  

Shaking it. People may try to climb a mountain  or even ski off of it, but the mountain itself   remains unaffected. The ocean also can handle  anything that is thrown its way. Tidal waves,   hurricanes, tsunamis, and yes, even oil spills,  all cause fluctuations in the water, but in the  

End, the ocean remains intact. Mahendra means  maha-Indra, and is a reference to Lord Indra,   the king of heaven and the strongest fighter  of the demigod army. The Vedas tell us that   God is one, but that He deputes thousands  of highly elevated living entities known as  

Demigods to manage material affairs. Since the  beginning of time, there has been an ongoing   struggle between good and evil, the suras  and the asuras. The demigods are the suras,   and in their battles against the asuras, Indra  assumes the role of leader. By comparing her  

Husband to Indra, Sita is letting Ravana know  that Rama can never be defeated in battle. Not only did Sita list all of these wonderful  attributes of Rama, but she made sure to state   that she was His dependent, someone faithfully  engaged in His service and abiding by her vow  

To always follow Him [anuvrata]. This is an  important point. Since Lord Rama, God Himself,   was capable of all these great feats, it  naturally made sense that His dependents   would enjoy all the protections offered from such  a strong person. Ravana’s desire to have Sita was  

So strong that he would eventually forcibly drag  her away from the cottage and bring her back to   his island kingdom of Lanka. But Sita was a  pure devotee of God, which meant that she was   also unshakeable. She rebuffed all of Ravana’s  advances and never came over to the dark side.

The lesson here is that we should become  dependents of God and take shelter of His pure   devotees like Sita. She is the goddess of fortune  who also represents the Lord’s pleasure potency.   If we honor and worship her along with God’s  representative, the spiritual master, the Supreme  

Lord will be pleased with us and grant us full  protection from all the bad elements in life. CHAPTER 11 – AUSPICIOUS MEASUREMENTS “I am faithfully engaged in the service of Rama,  who is greatly fortunate, fixed in truthfulness,   gifted with all auspicious marks, and has  the bodily measurements of a banyan tree  

[nyagrodha-parimandala].” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.34) God is great. The Vedas, the original scriptures  for mankind, try to put this greatness into words.   The Lord also helps us by appearing from time to  time in this world to enact pastimes and protect  

His devotees. The total number of incarnations is  too large to count, but the Vedas give us an idea   of the more important ones. Aside from telling us  when and where the Lord appears, the Vedas inform   us that God’s incarnations can be identified by  the presence of auspicious marks on the body.

When God incarnates, His auspicious  marks appear on the soles of His feet   and also in other areas. Lord Krishna  is the Supreme Personality of Godhead,   and His primary expansion is that of Lord Vishnu.  When appearing on earth, these expansions are   referred to as Vishnu incarnations.  The beautiful auspicious marks of Lord  

Vishnu also appear on the bodies of His various  incarnations such as Matsya, Kurma, Narasimha,   Rama, etc. The Lord’s most recent appearance on  earth as a human being was as Lord Chaitanya,   who also possessed these auspicious marks  on His body. Though Lord Chaitanya is not  

Included in the list of major incarnations of  Lord Vishnu, His appearance is hinted at in both   the Shrimad Bhagavatam and Mahabharata.  In addition to having auspicious marks,   Lord Chaitanya also had unique bodily dimensions.  His arms and His chest had the same measurements,  

Thus He was referred to as nyagrodha-parimandala.  When translated, this term means that His body   had measurements like those of a banyan tree.  This same description, nyagrodha-parimandala,   also applied to God’s incarnation as Lord Rama,  who appeared on earth during the Treta Yuga.

Why would God need to have auspicious marks and  unique measurements for His body? When the Lord   appears on earth, He doesn’t openly disclose  His divinity. Human beings have free will,   in that they are not forced to do anything,  including love. We have experience of this  

In our own lives. We may love another person  very much, but it isn’t guaranteed that the   love will be returned. It works the same way  between the living entities and the Supreme   Lord. God is the original reservoir of pleasure,  but the material world poses an obstacle to the  

Living entities. Here, we are given all sorts  of avenues to seek pleasure. We can seek out   sense gratification through many different  activities, but they all lack a relation to   God. The Lord wants to reclaim His lost sons and  daughters, but there is no way He can force us  

To love Him. If there is coercion involved, the  relationship can’t be defined as a loving one. The Supreme Lord comes to earth to annihilate  miscreants and to give pleasure and protection   to the devotees. God is always God, however, thus  when He appears in the body of a human being,  

He will naturally possess extraordinary qualities.  These include auspicious marks on His body and   unique measurements for His limbs and other body  parts. These unique dimensions remind people that   He is no ordinary human being, for we tend to be  drawn to people who have extraordinary abilities.  

The Olympic runner, Usain Bolt, was a great  example of this. At the 2008 Summer Olympics,   Bolt shattered the world record in the 100m  dash. The uniqueness of his body is what   really intrigued people. It has always been  assumed that tall people wouldn’t make good  

Runners because their height would require too  much effort from their long legs. Bolt debunked   this theory by not only winning gold medals,  but by easily defeating the competition. His   unique running style and bodily dimensions made  him an athlete of interest around the world.

In a similar manner, God breaks the mold when  it comes to all areas of opulence. As Bhagavan,   He possesses the qualities of renunciation,  beauty, wealth, fame, knowledge, and strength   to the fullest degree. When the Lord appears on  earth, His body is not material, meaning it is  

Not subject to creation and destruction  in the same way that ours are. However,   in order to fit in with the rest of society,  the Lord’s body appears to be material. This,   again, is to keep His divinity under  wraps as best as possible. The devotees,  

However, can tell that He is God  based on distinguishing features. In His incarnation as Lord Rama,  God took birth as a pious prince,   expert at warfare and dedicated to the  welfare of the pious. His wife, Sita Devi,   and younger brother, Lakshmana, accompanied  Him on a fourteen year sojourn through the  

Forests of India. On one occasion, the group  was visited by the Rakshasa demon Ravana,   who appeared in front of their cottage in the  guise of a mendicant. Ravana was a committed   atheist who had intentions of kidnapping Sita  and making her his wife. He created a diversion  

Whereby Rama and Lakshmana were led away from the  cottage, leaving Sita all by herself. At first,   Ravana approached Sita in a humble manner, but  then eventually the demon revealed his true form. Sita sternly rebuked Ravana. In the above  referenced statement, she is describing the  

Glories of her husband to the demon. This was done  for two reasons. Sita inherently loved Rama and   depended on Him for everything. This is the dharma  of pure devotees; they don’t surrender to anyone   else except God and His representatives. Sita’s  description also served to inform Ravana that  

Rama was no ordinary man. Ravana had ascended  to power by propitiating various demigods with   sacrifices and austerities. They rewarded him  with many boons, and Ravana in turn used those   boons to defeat many great demigods. For this  reason, he thought that he was invincible.

Ravana wasn’t threatened by Rama. “This poor  prince is living in the forest like a homeless   man. How powerful can He be? I’m richer than He  is, and I rule over a large kingdom. How did this  

Man get such a beautiful wife? I will take her for  myself.” From Sita’s description, we see that Rama   not only possessed auspicious marks, but that He  was greatly fortunate [maha-bhagam] and dedicated   to the truth. This stood in stark contrast  to Ravana’s features. Sita was letting Ravana  

Know that her husband was nothing like him, and  that she had no desire to be with such a demon. In the end, Ravana would not heed Sita’s  warnings, and would kidnap her anyway. Rama,   with the help of Lakshmana, Hanuman, and  the Vanara army, would march to Lanka,  

Defeat and kill Ravana, and rescue Sita.  Everything relating to God is beautiful   and auspicious. If we make Him the object  of our worship and become His dependent,   we will always feel as if we are in the presence  of greatness. May the all-auspicious Lord Rama  

Grant us the benediction of having His  beautiful darshana, day-after-day. CHAPTER 12 – A LION AMONG MEN “I am faithfully engaged in the service of  Rama, who is a lion among men [nrisimham],   has a broad chest and powerful arms, who  treads the earth like a lion and who is  

Like a lion in prowess.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.35) Lord Rama is God Himself, and one of His most  distinguishing characteristics is His kindness.   Rama means one who gives pleasure to others, and  by taking one glance at His beautiful face, one  

Can see that He is worthy of this name. But there  are two sides to the Supreme Lord. He gives bliss   and happiness to the devotees, but to the demons  He brings pain and suffering. Actually, the demons   bring it upon themselves through their actions  committed against the suras, or devotees. The Lord  

Is merely the instrument of their punishment. Sita  Devi, Lord Rama’s wife, correctly described Rama   as being a lion among men; someone who the demons  can never escape from. Rama is all-powerful, and   He uses His dexterity and fighting abilities to  mercilessly attack the demons. For the miscreants  

Of the world, there is nowhere to run and nowhere  to hide from the attacks of the Supreme Lord. Sometimes we commit sins while other people  aren’t looking. We may be walking through a   shopping mall and see that someone drops some  money on the floor. No one else sees the money,  

So the choice is ours as to what we should  do. Some of us will keep walking, while others   will let the person know that their money has  fallen. And there are still others who will   quickly grab the money and walk out of the mall  as fast as they can. They think to themselves,  

“No one saw me take the money; therefore I will  not suffer any negative consequences. You snooze,   you lose.” This mindset seems justified on the  surface, but the Vedas tell us that the laws of   karma will eventually take hold. Karma is fruitive  activity, or those actions performed which have  

Both intended and unintended consequences. For  example, we may work hard during the day at our   jobs so that we can have enough money to support  our families. The intended consequence of such   work is that our bank balances will increase. The  unintended consequences may be that our family  

Life will suffer since we are at the office all  the time. Our stress levels may also increase. This is a crude example, but the principles can  be applied to almost any action we take. There   is a God, and He most certainly witnesses all  of our actions. This very point was pondered by  

The great warrior, Arjuna, on the battlefield of  Kurukshetra some five thousand years ago. Taking   part in a conversation with Lord Krishna, the  Supreme Personality of Godhead, Arjuna was baffled   when He heard Krishna tell him that both of them  had lived before. Not only had they endured many  

Previous lives, but Krishna could remember all of  them, while Arjuna could not. The reason for this   is that God expands Himself as the Supersoul,  or Paramatma, and resides within the heart   of every living entity, acting as a neutral  witness. He is neutral because the jivatma,  

Or soul of the living entity, causes the body to  act through the gross and subtle senses. God plays   no direct role in our activities, but He certainly  keeps track of what we do, both good and bad. “Just as a tree starts to blossom during the  proper season, so the doer of sinful deeds  

Inevitably reaps the horrible fruit  of their actions at the appropriate   time.” (Lord Rama speaking to Khara,  Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 29.8) Aside from the Supersoul witnessing everything,  the god of justice, Yamaraja, also takes note   of all our actions. For every karmic activity we  perform, we accumulate merits and demerits. The  

Reactions to our work are known as karma-phalam.  This karma-phalam can manifest itself in the   afterlife, through ascension to heaven or demotion  to hell, or it can manifest immediately through   negative and positive consequences. Some people  bemoan this fact. “Why does God wait to punish  

Those who commit sins such as rape and murder?”  The answer again is that God has no interest in a   person’s karmic activities. The laws of nature, as  administered by the demigods, including Yamaraja,   dole out punishments and rewards. A person, who  steals money while no one else is looking might  

Have more sinful desires they need to act out.  The Lord doesn’t want to get in the way of our   free will. At the same time, there are others  who are slated to have bad things happen to   them due to past misdeeds. These bad events  don’t necessarily occur in the afterlife,  

For another person’s sinful actions can be  the instrument of punishment. For example,   a person that gets murdered in this life may  have committed the same activity in a previous   life. Instead of God punishing the person  directly, He allows the laws of nature to  

Take control and dole out the punishment through  the activities of new murderers, and so forth. If God is neutral towards those  acting on the platform of karma,   who does He take an interest in? The Vedas tell us  that God’s ultimate feature is that of Bhagavan,  

Or one who possesses all opulences.  Bhagavan is the richest, wisest, smartest,   etc. Lord Krishna is the original Bhagavan, and  His direct expansions, of which Lord Rama is one,   are also considered to be Bhagavan. Those who  are in direct association with Bhagavan are known  

As bhagavata. There are two kinds of bhagavata;  the book, Shrimad Bhagavatam, and the devotees.   Simply put, God protects the bhagavatas. The  difference between a devotee and a karmi is that   a devotee abandons all fruitive activity. This  doesn’t mean that they don’t perform activities,  

But rather all their actions are meant as a  sacrifice to God. What does this mean? It means   that everything is done for the Lord’s benefit.  This includes eating, sleeping, working, talking,   walking, etc. Every activity can be spiritualized  if it is done in accordance with the will of  

The Supreme Lord, or one of His authorized  representatives such as the spiritual master. Since the devotees engage in devotional  service, they become immune to karma-phalam,   or the reactions of karma. They are immune to  karma because they associate with the spiritual   energy, which is superior. Spirit is  superior to matter because matter is  

Useless without a driving force. A car is  just a hunk of metal without a driver. It   is not until a living entity, or spiritual  spark, gets behind the wheel of a car that   the vehicle takes shape and become useful.  In a similar manner, material activities,  

Or karma, are considered useless because  they simply aim to please the body,   which is nothing more than matter. Thus  material nature is considered inferior,   and those who associate with it are considered  less intelligent. The spiritual energy is superior   because it is God’s direct energy. Those who  associate with the spiritual, or divine, energy  

Enjoy the protections offered by God. In a sense,  it can be thought of as God protecting His own. Devotees can’t always carry out their activities  without opposition. Aside from the karmis,   there are others who openly detest God and His  devotees. These people are known as asuras,  

And they take any opportunity they can to thwart  devotional activities. It is these people that God   goes after. For devotees, death is not feared  because theirs souls are in the process of   returning to Krishna’s spiritual abode. For the  demons, death is a painful experience which is  

Dreaded. For the best of demons, God personally  makes an appearance as all-devouring death. When   God comes to attack an enemy of the devotees,  there is nowhere to hide and nowhere to run. A famous example of this occurred with Durvasa  Muni. Durvasa was by no means an asura,  

But he once made the mistake of insulting the  great Maharaja Ambarisha. To punish Durvasa,   Lord Krishna unleashed His Sudarshana chakra,   a disc and weapon of choice of the Lord. The disc  followed Durvasa all through the three worlds,   and the muni was unable to escape it,  even after seeking Lord Shiva’s shelter.  

Finally Durvasa begged forgiveness from  Ambarisha himself and was eventually saved. A famous demon who wasn’t saved was Ravana, the  ten-headed Rakshasa king of Lanka. During the   Treta Yuga, Lord Krishna appeared on earth  as Lord Rama, a handsome and pious prince.  

The Lord travelled through the forests of India  for fourteen years along with Sita Devi, who was   His wife, and Lakshmana, His younger brother.  On one occasion while Rama and Lakshmana were   off chasing a deer for Sita, Ravana approached  the group’s hermitage while in the guise of a  

Mendicant. He propositioned Sita, who was all  alone, but she sternly rebuked him. Finally   revealing his true Rakshasa form, Ravana directly  insisted that Sita become his wife. In reply,   Sita Devi gave a series of descriptions of Lord  Rama, of which the above referenced statement was  

One. She boldly declared herself to be a dependent  of Rama, and also described some of His virtues. Sita told Ravana that Rama was a lion among  men and that He was very powerful. In fact,   she used the word nrisimham, meaning  a lion-like man. This is also a subtle  

Hint at Rama’s divinity. Lord Rama was an  incarnation of Vishnu, or Krishna. One of   Vishnu’s other primary incarnations was that  of Narasimhadeva [also spelled Nrisimhadeva],   the half-man/half-lion form who protected Prahlada  Maharaja. Sita was not only speaking the truth,  

But also trying to get Ravana to desist from  his sinful desires. Sadly, the demon would not   listen. He couldn’t understand how Rama could be  so powerful, for He was roaming the forests like   a homeless man. Ravana forcibly kidnapped Sita  and took her to his island kingdom of Lanka.  

Lanka was very far away from any mainland,  so it was no accident that Ravana set up   shop there. He wanted to be insulated from  any attacks. He knew he lived a sinful life,   for he used to regularly kill sages living in the  forests and then eat their flesh. Ravana thought  

That if he lived far enough away, nobody would  be able to mount any serious attack against him. He thought wrong. God can do anything. As Lord  Rama, God appeared in the dress of a human being,   but His powers were still unlimited. When God  comes to earth, He performs extraordinary feats  

But He also empowers His devotees to perform  great activities in His service. To rescue Sita,   Rama enlisted the help of Vanaras, a race of  monkeys residing in the forest of Kishkindha.   Their greatest warrior was Hanuman, who was  so powerful that he leapt his way to Lanka,  

Where he found Sita and then set fire to  the whole town. Upon returning to Rama,   Hanuman helped the Vanara army construct  a bridge to Lanka. In this way, Rama and   His group were able to storm Ravana’s  city, kill the demon, and rescue Sita.

Lord Rama hunted down Ravana like a lion  hunting down its prey, and He showed him no   mercy. Ravana’s entire kingdom was destroyed  and, to add insult to injury, Rama installed   Ravana’s younger brother, Vibhishana, as the new  king. Vibhishana had given up Ravana’s company and  

Surrendered himself to Lord Rama. Lord Rama was a  lion among men, but He still remained magnanimous   to the end. He didn’t take any of Ravana’s  wealth or opulence, for His only purpose in   killing the demon was to rescue His wife and  grant protection to the devotees. The lesson  

Here is that we should follow Sita’s example. If  we associate with the spiritual energy and commit   ourselves to performing devotional service, we  can hopefully one day confidently assert that   we too are faithfully engaged in the service of  that lion among men, Shri Ramachandra Bhagavan. CHAPTER 13 – JITENDRIYA

“I am faithfully engaged in the service of  Rama, who is a hero and prince of wide renown,   who has full control over His senses and mind  [jitendriyam], who is mighty-armed, and whose   face resembles a full moon.” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.36)

Passion can be a very tricky thing. It serves  as an impetus for work, but at the same time,   if it is left uncontrolled, it can lead to our  downfall. Therefore, in the Vedic tradition,   those who can keep their passions, which are  driven by the senses and mind, under control  

Are considered praiseworthy. This especially  holds true with passions relating to sex life. In the modern culture, men and women freely  intermingle, thus relationships are formed   based off of free will. A boy is attracted to  a girl and vice versa, and the two eventually  

Decide to form relationships. The religious  institution of marriage is now mostly based   on romantic attraction between men and  women. The love that results from this   attraction can be quite passionate. Since  relationships are determined by free will,   the art of seduction holds more importance in  society. Men who can seduce or attract a lot  

Of women are considered powerful and strong,  whereas those who are awkward around beautiful   women are considered weak and unintelligent. Many  Hollywood films are based around this concept. A   young teenager will be deemed a loser or a geek at  the start of the movie, and he’ll slowly work his  

Way towards being able to speak to the girl of his  dreams and hopefully have a relationship with her. This type of thinking is based on the  idea that material sense gratification   is the ultimate goal of life. There  is no higher sense pleasure than sex,  

So those who can enjoy it to the  fullest are considered successful,   whereas those who aren’t are considered failures.  Money, wealth, fame, etc. are all based around sex   life. Even exercise regimens such as weightlifting  and playing sports have sex desire at their core,  

For the more attractive a man’s body, the more  likely he will be to score with attractive women. Sex life is usually part of the mode of passion,  which along with goodness and ignorance make up   the three modes of material nature. The Vedas  tell us that the mode of passion involves  

Fruitive activity that, when left unchecked, can  lead to lust, anger, greed, etc. This then leads   to bewilderment and a forgetfulness of the rules  of propriety. A classic example of this scenario   was seen with superstar golfer Tiger Woods.  Extremely successful at the sport he played,  

Tiger enjoyed universal acclaim and adoration.  One of the richest athletes on the planet,   Tiger could score with almost any girl he chose  to. Though he was married with children at home,   it was recently revealed that Tiger engaged  in many extramarital affairs. The number of  

Mistresses was so high that Woods is  now seeking rehab for sex addiction. The Vedas tell us that sex life can be very  dangerous, and thus should be kept in check as   much as possible. This doesn’t mean that all sex  is bad, but that the act should only be performed  

When one intends to beget progeny. On a material  level, we all accumulate debts at the time of   birth, with one of them being to the pitrs, or the  forefathers. We would never take birth were it not  

For sex life, thus we have a responsibility to  our forefathers to beget sons as a way of paying   them back. Every person is born with different  qualities, with some people being more passionate   than others. For those in rajo-guna, the mode  of passion, gambling and playing sports are  

Allowed. This is because passionate people need  an outlet, and competition is one way of acting   out one’s passions. The modern day sports athlete  is an example of a person in the mode of passion.   In previous times, the kshatriya kings were also  considered to be in the mode of passion, thus they  

Were allowed to marry more than one woman. Sex  desire is very strong in passionate people, so in   order to avoid illicit sex, kings were allowed to  marry more than one wife provided that they could   guarantee the protection and happiness of each  and every wife. So when we see today’s athletes  

Engaging in illicit sex life, it is not surprising  considering that they are in the mode of passion. Regardless of what our predicament is, the Vedas  tell us that we should control our passions rather   than letting our passions control us. Those who  can keep their desires in check are virtuous  

And praiseworthy, while those who are slaves  to their senses are not. This was the point   stressed by Sita Devi, the wife of Lord Rama, an  incarnation of God. Many thousands of years ago,   Sita was living in the forest of Dandaka when  her hermitage was visited by the Rakshasa demon  

Ravana. Rama and His younger brother Lakshmana  were away from the cottage at the time,   so Ravana took it as an opportunity to try to  seduce Sita. He first appeared in the guise   of a brahmana and offered kind advances  towards Sita. After she rejected him,  

Ravana revealed his true Rakshasa form  and insisted that Sita become his wife. In response, Sita openly declared  that she was a devotee of Lord Rama,   and that she would never be devoted to  anyone else. In addition, she provided   details into Rama’s characteristics and personal  attributes. In the above referenced statement,  

We see that Sita is listing Rama’s control  over His mind and senses [jitendriyam] as   a character trait. This statement is very  important, for it serves two purposes. First,   it stresses the point that God is the all-powerful  and the most renounced. Sex life in the material  

World is a perverted reflection of the pure  form of love that exists in the spiritual   world between God and His pleasure potencies,  hladini-shakti. By declaring that Rama had His   passions under control, Sita also took a  direct jab at Ravana and his character.

Rakshasas are demons by nature, meaning  they take to adharma, or irreligion,   as a way of life. Ravana was very powerful  and materially opulent. He had hundreds   of beautiful wives. Having multiple  wives was surely allowed for a king,   but Ravana still engaged in illicit sex. He  and his queens were always drunk, eating meat,  

And enjoying sex life. He was very proud of  his playboy lifestyle. Yet we see that Ravana’s   passions were anything but under control. Simply  upon hearing of Sita’s beauty and bodily features,   Ravana was drawn to her. Like a moth to a flame,  Ravana sealed his demise by approaching Sita and  

Forcibly kidnapping her. Lord Rama was God  Himself in human form, and He would avenge   Sita’s kidnapping by marching to Ravana’s  city of Lanka and killing him in battle. Sita also made mention of the fact that  Rama had a beautiful, moon-like face,  

And that His fame was spread throughout the world.  Again, these statements served the same purposes   of both praising Rama and insulting Ravana. God is  known as Bhagavan, meaning one who possesses all   opulences. When one sees pictures of Lord Rama  or takes darshana of His deity in the temple,  

They will see a handsome prince who is  always smiling. That is the Lord’s nature,   for He gives pleasure to others. Rama is  unbelievably famous; even Lord Krishna   and His childhood friends in Vrindavana used  to talk about Lord Rama, Hanuman, Lakshmana,  

Sita and others when they were playing. The  Ramayana, a book which details the life and   pastimes of Lord Rama, is probably the oldest  book in history and it is still read and revered   to this day. God is always God, meaning that  not only was Lord Rama famous during His time,  

But that His fame never diminishes. He is  just as famous today as He was in the past. Ravana thought of himself as beautiful and  famous, but his opulences paled in comparison   to Rama’s. Ravana performed austerities  that secured him ten heads; something  

He viewed as a benefit. Sita Devi, the most  beautiful woman to have ever graced the earth,   didn’t find Ravana attractive at all. Ravana was  proud of his beauty, but Sita directly insulted   him by extolling the beauty of her husband, Lord  Rama. Ravana also thought he was very famous, for  

He had defeated many great fighters in battle. In  fact, God only appeared on earth as Lord Rama at   the request of the demigods, who were all afraid  of Ravana. Sita, of course, wasn’t impressed   by Ravana’s fame. She was married to God, so  she knew who was the more famous of the two.

We shouldn’t be led astray by the popular  dogma which states that uncontrolled passion   and excessive women hunting are virtuous  activities. On the contrary, such activities   are very dangerous because they bind one to the  cycle of repeated birth and death. If a person is  

Addicted to sex life, why would God want to take  them away from their passion? On the contrary,   the Lord allows such a person to repeatedly take  birth, sometimes in a lower species such as a  

Monkey or a dog, where they can enjoy sex life  even more. If we can control our mind and senses,   we become praiseworthy. A person who has  control over their senses is considered sober,   or dhira. Self-control is considered a virtue  because it increases the likelihood that one  

Will take to spiritual life, which  is the ultimate aim of life anyway. No one was more committed to dharma than Lord  Rama. We too should commit ourselves to dharma   by controlling our passions and devoting  ourselves to God’s service. In this age,  

The easiest way to honor Sita and Rama is  to constantly chant the holy names of God,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna,  Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare   Hare”. God is beautiful, praiseworthy, and famous  throughout the world, and so are His devotees. CHAPTER 14 – TRUE COLORS

“Why would you, being a jackal, desire to be  with me, who am a lioness and very difficult   to obtain in this life? Just as a person can  see the sunshine but never touch it, you will   never be able to have me.” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.37)

God can only be pleased by the good; those  with a spotless character. The demons and   atheists can never come close to touching  God or any of His pure devotees. The Lord   and His faithful servants don’t  associate with cheaters, liars,  

And thieves. The deceitful might be able  to get away with fooling the common man,   but God can never be fooled through  false flattery and insincere kind words. It’s not uncommon for people to think that  their society is advanced both materially and  

Socially. For example, today men and women  are free to intermingle. This is seen as a   positive cultural evolution. Sex life is free and  open, with contraceptives used quite often. The   practice of abortion is also sanctioned throughout  the world. As a result of these advancements,  

Women especially have become more vulnerable  to the advances of lusty men. Men generally   have a much stronger sex desire than women.  Much stereotypical male-female humor revolves   around the idea of the man always wanting to  have sex and the woman always rejecting him.  

This theory has some validity to it, for adult  aged men do think about sex quite often. Today,   for younger men the aim is to try to  score with as many chicks as possible. Seducing a woman is not an easy thing, for it  takes alacrity and great skill. The typical  

Playboy has honed his skills through much trial  and error. Those who are expert in wooing women   are usually also expert in lying and cheating. The  two things go hand-in-hand because seducing women   is cheating in a sense. The Vedas tell us that  women and children should always be protected  

By the other members of society. For children,  protection involves providing for their food,   shelter, and clothing. It is also important  to keep them away from things that will harm   them. These rules apply to women as well. The  Vedas tell us that the best way to protect an  

Adult aged woman is to find her a husband.  Not only does a husband provide security and   a stable family life, but he also protects  the woman from being preyed upon by other   men for sex. When women aren’t married,  they are left unprotected and thus become  

Susceptible to cheating men. Having a one  night stand with a woman is really a form   of cheating because the man essentially uses  the woman for one night and then discards her. For the conditioned souls, it is important  to try to always act in the mode of goodness,  

And this applies to sex life as well. Sex is  allowed, but it should be regulated; it should   only be used to beget offspring with one’s spouse.  Any other type of sex is considered illicit and   sinful because it binds one to the repeated cycle  of birth and death. One night stands and wooing  

Women simply for sex pleasure are both considered  sinful acts, for the women are exploited. Cheaters do win sometimes, however, and the  after-effects aren’t pretty. The men that secure   relationships through lying often have trouble  once things get more serious. A person’s true  

Colors will eventually show. Relationships can  quickly crumble once the other party realizes   that they are with a reprobate. This principle  holds true not only of amorous relationships,   but also with politicians. Since democracy  is the popular style of government today,   elections are based on who can garner  the most votes. A politician gets votes  

By making promises to various groups of  voters. After getting elected, however,   it is often seen that the politician will go back  on their promises. Running for office and actually   governing are two completely different things.  More times than not, voters end up regretting  

Their vote once they see the true colors  of the candidate they previously supported. Liars and cheaters hurt themselves and the  people they deceive. People invest so much time   and emotion supporting their friends, paramours,  and political leaders, only to be burned in the  

End by many of them. Thus we see that even though  lying and cheating can provide short term gains,   in the long run, they don’t pay. This principle  holds true with God and His devotees as well. Many thousands of years ago, Lord Krishna, the  Supreme Personality of Godhead, advented on earth  

As a handsome and pious prince named Rama.  Krishna has many incarnations, or avataras,   and each one serves a specific purpose.  Lord Rama’s defining characteristic was   His adherence to dharma. Dharma is religiosity, or  occupational duty. We can also think of dharma as  

Virtue and piety. Rama paid special attention  to dharma because He was a prince born into a   very pious family, the Ikshvakus. During those  times, the governments were monarchies run by   members of the warrior class. There were  no votes, for the leaders were all expert  

Fighters who could defeat any enemy in  battle. Aside from being expert fighters,   the kings were all very pious because they  had to administer justice. It is quite common   to see police officers violate traffic laws and  politicians bend and shape the law in their favor,  

But the Vedas tell us that this is not ideal  behavior. A king must administer justice by   punishing criminals. If they themselves break  the law, how can they be taken seriously when   punishing the guilty? Citizens follow the behavior  of their leaders, and if they believe that their  

King is a cheater and a fraud, they will have  less of a reason to obey the laws of the land. Lord Rama was committed to not only maintaining  His own reputation, but also that of His family.   On one particular occasion, Rama’s father,  King Dasharatha of Ayodhya, made the mistake  

Of granting two boons to his youngest wife,  Kaikeyi. When cashing in her boons, Kaikeyi   requested that her son Bharata be installed as  king, and that Rama be sent to live in the forest   for fourteen years. Dasharatha was in a pickle.  As a pious king, he could not go back on his word,  

But at the same time, he would die without Rama,  who was His eldest and most beloved son. Lord Rama   took the decision out of Dasharatha’s hands  by insisting on obeying Kaikeyi’s requests.   He left for the forest along with His wife,  Sita Devi, and His younger brother, Lakshmana.

While living in the forest, one day the group’s  cottage was visited by the Rakshasa demon,   Ravana. Actually this was no coincidence,  for Ravana had set up a diversion which   lured both Rama and Lakshmana away from  the cottage. Ravana had heard that Sita  

Was the most beautiful woman in the world,  thus he insisted on having her for himself.   He initially approached Sita while he was in  the guise of a mendicant, but he soon revealed   his true identity. He tried to woo Sita by  telling her that he was a powerful king and  

That he would make her his chief wife. Ravana  had many wives whom he cavorted with regularly,   yet all that sex wasn’t enough for him,  for he could not live without having Sita. Sita was repulsed by Ravana’s advances. She  responded by openly declaring that she was  

Rama’s devotee. She also described Rama’s glories  and informed Ravana of His strength. In the above   referenced statement, she is chastising Ravana for  even thinking he could be with her. Sita described   Rama as being a lion among men, for He was the  most powerful person in the world. Being the  

Wife of the lion among men, Sita compares herself  to a lioness and Ravana to a jackal. Sita Devi,   being a pure devotee of God, was very clever.  She knew how to choose just the right words which  

Would both praise Rama and insult Ravana. A jackal  is not considered a virtuous animal by any means,   while a lioness is considered great and powerful.  She essentially told Ravana that the two of them   were incompatible. Being a great devotee, Sita  would never associate with an enemy of God.

Sita also told Ravana that he could never touch  her, just as how one can never touch the rays   of the sun. We may see the sunlight or sunshine,  but we can never actually touch it. In a similar  

Manner, a devotee of God can never be tainted by  the demons. Ravana wouldn’t heed Sita’s advice;   instead he would forcibly kidnap her and bring  her to his island kingdom of Lanka. Nevertheless,   even after months of trying, he  was never able to win Sita over.  

Rama eventually would kill him in  battle, thus proving Sita right. No one can touch Sita Devi except Rama,  or God. Sita is the goddess of fortune,   Lakshmiji, who is the wife of Lord  Narayana, or Vishnu. Narayana, Vishnu,   and Krishna are interchangeable names for  God since they all represent the original  

Personality of Godhead. Sita’s only interest is  to serve Rama, and she is also very kind to Rama’s   devotees. She grants wealth and good fortune to  those whose only business is devotional service   to God. If we use our wealth for other purposes,  we are essentially stealing Lakshmi in the same  

Way that Ravana did. We all saw what happened to  him, so it’s not a good idea to go down that path. To capture God’s attention, and the attention  of His devotees like Sita, we simply have to   regularly chant the Lord’s names, “Hare  Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna,  

Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama,  Hare Hare”. We can be honest with God, for   He already knows what’s in our heart. There is no  reason to lie to Him or to His devotees. Hanuman,   the great devotee of Rama, humbly approached the  Lord and served Him honestly and sincerely. As  

A result, Hanumanji is worshiped to this day  by millions, and his name is synonymous with   love and devotion to God. He achieved fame and  opulence a million times that of what Ravana had   while he was alive. We would be better served  to be more like Hanuman and less like Ravana.

CHAPTER 15 – THE FOREST FROM THE TREES “O ill-fated Rakshasa, since you wish to  take away the beloved wife of Raghava [Rama],   surely all these trees must appear to you as  made of gold.” (Sita Devi speaking to Ravana,   Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.38)

Ravana, the Rakshasa demon king, was so taken  away by passion, that he desired to steal   away the beautiful wife of Lord Rama, Sita  Devi. Sita was the epitome of virtue, as was   Rama. Lord Krishna is the Supreme Personality of  Godhead, who appears on earth from time to time to  

Annihilate the miscreants and give protection to  the devotees. Lord Rama was one such incarnation,   and He enjoyed many great pastimes with Sita and  His younger brother, Lakshmana. On one occasion,   the group’s hermitage in the forest of Dandaka  was visited by Ravana. Rama and Lakshmana were  

Away from the cottage at the time, so Ravana  used the opportunity to proposition Sita. In   the above referenced statement, Sita is sternly  rebuking the Rakshasa, telling him that he must   be deluded in thinking that he could ever  have God’s wife. He must also be mistaking  

Normal trees to be made of gold, which also  means that death was surely approaching him,   for only a dying person would start to  see everything around him as made of gold. These words uttered by Sita certainly were true.  Kama, or sense gratification, is certainly a part  

Of regulated material life, for there is even  a famous book known as the Kama Sutra, which   details the act of satisfying the senses through  sex life. Nevertheless, if kama is left unchecked,   it can lead to delusion, madness, and a general  straying from the principles of dharma. This was  

Precisely the case with Ravana, a ten-headed demon  who terrorized the world during the Treta Yuga,   the second time period of creation. Rakshasas are  a human-like species which live off meat eating,   illicit sex, and drinking wine. Ravana was still  religious nonetheless, so he performed many great  

Austerities to please the demigods. His style of  worship was performed in the mode of ignorance,   however. The mode of darkness, or ignorance,  is characterized by any activity which lacks   intelligence, knowledge, or fruitive activity. In  essence, the mode of darkness brings one further  

And further away from God, often times resulting  in demotion to a lower species in the next life. Ravana certainly performed great austerities  involving self-control and the self-infliction   of pain. As a result, Lord Brahma granted  him any boons of his choosing. Ravana,  

Being deluded by his ignorance, used these boons  to increase his material strength and fame. He   was given invincibility in battle against any  celestial and animal. Normally, such a boon   would be a great thing for a king, because it  would mean that they could adequately provide  

Protection to their citizens. Ravana, however,  used his strength to terrorize other demigods,   essentially Lord Brahma’s associates and friends.  Ravana defeated his own brother in battle,   Kuvera. There was no reason for this  fighting except for the fact that   Ravana wanted to be God. By definition,  God is the most powerful, wise, famous,  

And beautiful. Ravana didn’t believe in a higher  power, for he thought the demigods represented   the upper limit of opulence. By defeating them  in battle, Ravana thought himself to be God. Aside from terrorizing the innocent, Ravana  engaged in all sorts of other sinful activity.  

The Rakshasas of his kingdom were always drinking  wine. Through his various conquests of other   kingdoms, Ravana had amassed a great collection of  beautiful wives. He would always engage in sexual   activity with them, with Mandodari being his  chief wife. These women were all very beautiful,  

And anyone would kill to have them as a spouse.  Nevertheless, Ravana wasn’t satisfied. This is   the danger of kama. Life on earth is meant for  realizing God and not for simply satisfying the   senses. For this reason the Vedas recommend  that we regulate kama as much as possible.

Lord Rama, as part of His pastimes, travelled the  forests of India at the same time that Ravana was   ruling over his kingdom of Lanka. The demigods  had actually petitioned Lord Vishnu, God Himself,   to come to earth in human form to kill Ravana  and alleviate their suffering. In his haste,  

Ravana forgot to ask Lord Brahma for  immunity from human beings. Ravana   never thought that a mere mortal could ever  defeat him in battle. Using this loophole,   God came to earth as a human in Rama. The Lord  was living in the forest of Dandaka with Sita  

And Lakshmana when the group was attacked by  Ravana’s band of Rakshasas. Rama was an expert   kshatriya warrior, so He easily defeated  all 14,000 of Ravana’s Rakshasa associates. Angered by this, Ravana decided to kidnap  Sita as retaliation. More than just getting  

Revenge on Rama, Ravana heard of Sita’s  beauty and decided that he must have her.   This shows the seductiveness of kama.  Simply by hearing of another’s beauty,   Ravana was taken off the righteous  path. Even by today’s standards,   forcibly stealing another’s wife is considered a  deplorable act. Athletes and famous celebrities  

Who get caught in extramarital affairs are scorned  by the public. By the standard of material life,   Ravana should have been happy and content.  Even in today’s world, we see that illicit sex,   meat eating, gambling, and intoxication are  very common. Abortion is allowed in America,  

As is cow slaughter. It is a sinner’s paradise,  so the atheists should be happy. But we see that   is not the case. More than any other group,  the atheists are the most miserable among us. Again, this is because human life is meant for the  cultivation of knowledge. Not just any knowledge;  

Raja-vidya, the king of education dealing with the  soul and its relationship with God. The material   body that we currently occupy is subject to  creation and destruction. However opulent we may   be or however much we may satisfy our senses,  our experiences here are only temporary. The  

Spirit soul which resides within the body, the  atma, is eternal. Since the soul never takes   birth and never dies, it must have a natural  home. The Vedas tell us that this home is in   the spiritual world alongside the Supreme  Personality of Godhead, Lord Shri Krishna.  

Ishvara parama krishna, the Supreme Controller  is Lord Krishna. Perfection in life is achieved   when the spirit soul returns to one of Krishna’s  spiritual planets in Krishnaloka or Vaikunthaloka. Sinful life is harmful because it takes us off  the straightened path. All activities should be  

Performed with the aim of returning to God’s  spiritual kingdom. Any activity which keeps   us bound to the cycle of birth and death is  considered sinful. The height of sinful life   is illicit sex, a byproduct of uncontrolled  kama. We see that Ravana’s sinful life led  

Him to falsely believing he could have Rama’s  wife, i.e. taking ordinary trees to be made   of gold. This is the definition of maya, taking  something to be what it is not. For the devotees,   the opposite situation occurs. They end up seeing  the trees, and everything else in the creation,  

As being God’s property. This is the proper way to  view things. The Vedanta-sutras tell us that the   Supreme Absolute Truth is the original source of  everything. All things that we see in this life,   matter and spirit, sprouted from the breathing  of Lord Narayana at the beginning of time.

The best occupation for the living  entity is devotional service,   or bhakti-yoga. Kama involves satisfying our  own senses, but bhakti-yoga aims to please God.   This isn’t an artificial engagement either. The  spirit soul is naturally inclined to performing   devotional service. This was the path taken by  Sita Devi, Rama’s wife. She performed all nine  

Processes of devotional service perfectly. Sita  always recited Rama’s name, offered Him prayers,   remembered Him at all times, served  His lotus feet, became His friend,   and surrendered everything unto Him. As a result  of her service, she viewed all living entities  

Equally. When Ravana first approached her, he was  in the guise of a brahmana, or mendicant. Sita   immediately welcomed him and openly declared  that everything she had in her possession   was intended for the brahmana’s benefit. Her  husband was away from the cottage at the time,  

So she was a little distressed, but she didn’t  let that stand in the way of welcoming a guest. The lesson here is that we should follow the path  of Sita Devi and not that of Ravana. Unrestricted   kama will lead to our downfall. Unfortunately,  Ravana would not heed the advice given to him by  

Sita. He would forcibly kidnap Sita, an act which  ultimately led to his death. Not only was he never   able to bring Sita under his control, but Ravana  would lose everything when Rama and His army   arrived at his kingdom of Lanka. Rama would defeat  and kill Ravana, and install Ravana’s brother,  

Vibhishana, as the new king. Those who follow  the path of devotional service will never have   to worry about delusion. By regularly chanting  God’s names, “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna   Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama  Rama, Hare Hare”, we can see the forest from the  

Trees and see that everlasting happiness can only  come through association with the Supreme Lord. CHAPTER 16 – DEATH WISH “Do you wish to uproot the teeth from the mouth of  a hungry lion, who is the enemy of the swift deer,  

Or from the mouth of a venomous serpent? Do  you wish to take away the best of mountains,   Mandara, using just your hands? Do  you wish to drink deadly poison and   come away alive? Since you wish to take  away the beloved wife of Raghava [Rama],  

You must want to rub your eyes with  pins and lick a razorblade with your   tongue.” (Sita Devi speaking to Ravana,  Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.39-41) Religious leaders warn us of the punishment of  eternal damnation for those who don’t accept the  

Supremacy of God. In actuality, just taking birth  in this material world is itself a form of misery,   for we are constantly struggling with  the dualities of happiness and sadness,   heat and cold, success and defeat. There is  a more severe form of punishment, however,  

Reserved for the enemies of God and His  devotees. There are many ways to describe   what exactly happens to those who cross the  Supreme Lord, but sometimes we require the use   of analogy and alliteration to help convey the  message. God is not always visible before us,  

Especially if our eyes are materially conditioned,  thus it is difficult to comprehend what will   happen should we make Him angry or offend  His devotees. In this regard, Sita Devi,   the wife of Lord Rama, provides a few comparisons  and analogies to help us better understand.

“How can we offend someone that we can’t  see?” This is an understandable question,   for how do we even know that God exists? The Vedas  tell us that the Supreme Personality of Godhead,   Lord Shri Krishna, can be realized in three  distinct features: Brahman, Paramatma,  

And Bhagavan. Brahman is the all-encompassing  energy; the sum and substance of everything;   all matter and spirit. In the varnashrama-dharma  system, the brahmanas are considered the highest   societal division because they know Brahman. One  who knows Brahman understands that everything,   including every person and every living  entity, makes up the complete whole,  

Or Brahman. Hence there is really  no difference between any of us.   Our material bodies may be different due to  the influences of karma [fruitive activity]   and guna [material qualities], but at  the core, every living entity is equal. A higher realization than Brahman is Paramatma,  or the Supersoul that resides within the heart  

Of every living entity. Our identity comes  from the atma, or the individual soul that   resides within the heart. Technically this soul  is referred to as the jivatma, since it belongs   to the living entity. There is another soul that  resides side-by-side with the jivatma. This is  

Known as the Paramatma, or Supersoul, and it is  a direct expansion of God. The jivatma forms the   basis of our ordinary consciousness while the  Paramatma represents the Supreme Consciousness.   It is referred to as supreme because the  Paramatma acts as a sort of neutral witness.  

Since it is a personal expansion of God, it has  knowledge of all the events of our current life,   and it also remembers everything from our  previous lives. The same can’t be said for the   jivatma. The Paramatma is also conscious of the  experiences and thoughts of every living entity,  

Whereas we are only conscious of the events of  our own life. Since the Supersoul is superior to   jivatma, the “param” prefix is added to the word  “atma”, forming Paramatma. Lord Krishna says in   the Bhagavad-gita, “ishvarah sarva-bhutanam  hrideshe’rjuna tishthati”, which means   the supreme controller, Ishvara, resides  within the heart of every living entity.

Paramatma is an expansion of God; a fact which  implies that it has a source. That source is   Bhagavan, or the Supreme Personality of Godhead.  In common parlance, the term “God” essentially   refers to Bhagavan. God is a person just like  us, except that He is much greater in power.  

There is no difference in quality between  Paramatma and jivatma, but the quantitative   powers cannot be compared. Since Bhagavan is the  source of both atmas, He always remains supreme. So how can we see God? Since He is both Brahman  and Paramatma, the Lord can actually be seen  

Everywhere. The spirit spark, represented  by the activities of the living entities,   shows us that God exists everywhere.  Moreover, Bhagavan takes other forms   such as shastra and guru. Shastras are law  codes, or religious scriptures. The Vedas,   the scriptures emanating from the dawn of time,  were passed down by Lord Krishna. Veda means  

Knowledge, thus the Vedas are a collection  of the highest truths of life. Krishna also   incarnated as Vyasadeva, who authored a  tremendous amount of Vedic literature,   all of which essentially describes the same  teachings of the original Vedas through   different mediums such as historical accounts,  hymns, and carefully thought out aphorisms.

The guru, or spiritual master, is the pure  devotee of Krishna, so his words are directly   coming from God. If we studied the teachings  of all the great Vaishnava saints of the past,   we will find that none of them take  credit for their philosophies, ideas,  

Or teachings. They all give credit to their  own guru, and to God. The guru is the most   knowledgeable person because He knows that  Lord Krishna is the Supreme Absolute Truth,   and that anything that praises Him or  accurately describes His glories is also  

Perfect. Thus when we hear the instructions of  the guru, we are directly connecting with God. Lord Krishna also appears in two other important  forms: the deity and the holy name. The deity   appears to be made of wood or stone, but since  it is crafted by a devotee, it is a direct  

Incarnation of God. In the impersonalist  community, the terms “nirguna” [without   attributes] and “saguna” [with attributes] are  thrown around quite often as descriptions for the   Absolute Truth, or Krishna. The deity is referred  to as the saguna form since it represents a form  

Of the Lord which has hands, legs, eyes, etc.  God certainly has unlimited forms [ananta-rupam],   for He can transform and expand Himself into  anything. Yet He always remains a person,   even through His incarnation as the deity. The  Lord understands that we don’t have the eyes  

To see Him, so He kindly appears in a form  that allows us to get around this defect. In this age especially, God incarnates in the  form of His holy name. Those who regularly chant,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna  Krishna, Hare Hare, Hare Rama  

Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”, can be in  direct contact with God. Hearing is actually   more important than seeing because knowledge  is best acquired through the hearing process. Now that we have information about how to see  God, what should we do with this knowledge? The  

Vedas tell us that our most important occupation  is bhakti-yoga, or devotional service. Most of   our time is spent satisfying our own needs  or those of our friends, family, co-workers,   nation, etc. Meeting these needs is a requirement  for having a calm and peaceful material life,  

But the real mission in life is to please the  soul and not just the body. The soul can only   be satisfied by connecting it with God.  This process is known as yoga. There are   different types of yoga, but the highest  is the one that allows us to connect with  

God through love. This is precisely what  devotional service aims to do. Hearing,   chanting, remembering, worshiping the Lotus  feet, and surrendering everything unto the   Lord are some of the primary processes of  devotional service. Those who take up this   discipline are known as bhaktas, or devotees,  and they become very dear to the Supreme Lord.

By default, God is neutral towards every  living entity. Since He wants us to spend   our time performing yoga, the Lord makes  no distinctions between people who take   to karmic activity. With fruitive  activity, sometimes we may succeed,   while at other times we fail . This success  or failure is all of the material variety,  

Meaning that God has no direct association with  it. The Lord makes an exception to His rule   of neutrality for the bhaktas. The devotees  have decided that the purpose of human life   is to perform yoga, thus the Lord helps them  along in their practice. The flip side of this  

Equation is that the Lord directly intercedes  when the devotional service of the bhaktas is   disturbed. This is precisely what happened many  thousands of years ago during the Treta Yuga. A Rakshasa demon by the name of Ravana was  wreaking havoc throughout the world. Not just  

An ordinary karmi, Ravana was an asura, an enemy  of the devotees. Asuras want the entire world to   worship them, thus they view God as their  chief competitor. Though God never forces   anyone to worship Him, the asuras don’t play  by the same rules. They take to aggressive  

Measures to thwart the devotional activities  of others. To help protect the devotees,   the Lord personally comes to protect them  when the situation gets out of hand. To   help protect the sages from the attacks  of Ravana and his Rakshasa associates,   Krishna incarnated on earth as  a kshatriya prince named Rama.

Lord Rama roamed the forests of India for  fourteen years with His wife, Sita Devi,   and His younger brother, Lakshmana. On one  occasion, Ravana approached the group’s cottage   in the forest of Dandaka while Rama and Lakshmana  were momentarily away. Wanting to kidnap Sita,  

Ravana first approached her in the guise  of a mendicant. Sita kindly welcomed him,   and Ravana replied with subtle advances. Sita  kindly rebuked him, informing him of who she was,   where she came from, and who her husband was.  Ravana heard enough and finally revealed his  

True nature. In response, Sita Devi strongly  chastised him. In the above referenced statement,   Sita is comparing Ravana’s desire to have her to  that of several stupid and dangerous activities. By stating that Ravana wished to remove the teeth  of a lion, Sita is informing him that Rama was the  

Lion and that Ravana would be eaten up should he  try something so stupid. Sita was Rama’s beloved   wife, so anyone who would cross her would have to  deal with the wrath and punishment inflicted by   Lord Rama, who was God Himself. Trying to steal  God’s wife was also akin to trying to walk away  

Alive after drinking poison, trying to rub one’s  eye with pins, or trying to lick a razor with   one’s tongue. These are all ridiculous acts that  no one with any intelligence would ever think of   trying. Sadly, Ravana didn’t comprehend. He would  forcibly kidnap Sita after hearing these words.

The result was much worse than  what Sita described. Ravana was   a great king who had amassed a great  fortune. His island kingdom of Lanka   was a sinner’s paradise. He had hundreds  of beautiful palaces bedecked with gold,   filled with the most beautiful queens in the  world. Yet by crossing Lord Rama, he would go  

On to lose everything. Rama’s faithful servant,  Hanuman, would lay waste to the city of Lanka,   and then Rama would finish the job by defeating  and killing Ravana in battle. Ravana worked   so hard to acquire material powers, and they  disappeared in an instant after he crossed God.

When one crosses the Supreme Lord or one of His  devotees, they must suffer the consequences.   Regardless of whether we believe in God  or not, the negative reactions that come   through offending His devotees will still come  to us. Knowing this, we are better off becoming  

Devotees ourselves. Actually, there is no reason  to fear Lord Krishna or His devotees. The Lord   kindly requests us to become His devotees, but He  never forces us, for there is no love in coercion.   Those who associated with Sita and Rama in  a loving way – such as Hanuman, Vibhishana,  

And countless others – achieved eternal bliss  and happiness. The same can happen for us. CHAPTER 17 – A WORTHY PARTNER “Since you are one who wishes to assail the  beloved wife of Rama, you must also wish to  

Swim across the ocean while wearing a boulder  around your neck, and take away the sun and the   moon using just your hands. Since you wish to take  away Rama’s wife, who is of the highest character,  

You must also wish to put out a blazing fire  using just a piece of cloth. Since you are   one who wishes to obtain the worthy wife of  Rama [His ideal match], you must also wish to   walk across iron needles.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.42-44)

In this passage, Sita Devi, the worthy wife of  Lord Rama, is explaining to Ravana how ridiculous   his idea of having her is. It’s deplorable for  a man to covet another’s wife, let alone the   wife of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.  Lord Rama was an incarnation of God, and Sita  

Was an incarnation of God’s wife in the spiritual  world, Lakshmi Devi. Sita herein compares Ravana’s   lusty desires to impossible feats, or those  actions which are so silly that they aren’t   even undertaken. She is illustrating absurdity by  being absurd. Instead of simply chastising Ravana,  

She is trying to show the folly of his desires by  comparing them to even more ridiculous acts. More   than anything else, Sita reaffirms the fact that  she is the worthy wife of Rama and no one else. Sita Devi was born and raised as the daughter  of the King of Mithila, Maharaja Janaka. When  

She was a baby, the king found her one day  while plowing a field and then raised her as   his own daughter. Around the same time, Lord  Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead,   advented on earth in the form of a pious prince  named Rama. Janaka held a self-choice ceremony,  

Or svayamvara, to decide Sita’s nuptials.  Lord Rama happened to attend this ceremony,   and after lifting the famous bow of Lord Shiva,  won the hand of Sita in marriage. The two lived   happily in Rama’s kingdom of Ayodhya for  twelve years when Rama was suddenly ordered  

To leave and not return for fourteen years.  The couple then roamed the forests of India   along with Rama’s younger brother, Lakshmana.  They set up a cottage in the forest of Dandaka.   It was there that Ravana, a Rakshasa demon,  appeared before Sita and propositioned her.

Sita was worthy of Rama and Rama was worthy  of Sita. The purity went both ways. On the   highest level of understanding, there is  no difference between the two because one   person is the energy and the other is the  energetic. In fact, this is how the Vedas,  

The ancient scriptures of India, view a marriage.  Through the religious institution of marriage,   the husband and wife assume one identity,  sharing a common fate in the afterlife.   This relationship is an outgrowth of the  pure loving relationship that exists in  

The spiritual world between God and His pleasure  potency expansions. God is the original person,   adi-purusha, from whom everything emanates.  God is the supreme enjoyer after all,   so to facilitate His desire for enjoyment, He  expands Himself into pleasure potency forms,   which are known as hladini-shakti.  Krishna is the original form of God,  

And Shrimati Radharani is the original pleasure  potency. From Radharani come all the goddesses of   fortune, or Lakshmijis. So in essence, there is no  difference between Radha-Krishna, and Sita-Rama. As God’s most intimate associate in conjugal love,  Sita possesses the highest qualities of devotion.  

During her time on earth, she never thought of  anyone except Rama. She executed the processes   of devotional service to perfection. Thus she  was the only worthy spouse for Lord Rama. In a   similar manner, Rama was the only worthy husband  for Sita due to her pious and chaste nature. The  

Relationship between God and His pure devotees  operates in a manner similar to that of a good   marriage. In a marriage, a husband will love and  protect his wife provided that she is completely   devoted to him. The husband will excuse all  nagging and pestering or anything else he finds  

To be annoying from the wife, provided that she  has no interest other than to serve him. This is   the definition of chastity. In a similar manner,  Lord Krishna relieves us of all sinful reactions   provided that our only interest is to serve Him.  It’s not that He gets angry if we forget Him,  

But He will pay more attention to us if  we shift our interests in His direction. Sita was both a chaste wife and a devotee, so  she was doubly worthy of Rama’s protection. In   performing her pastimes, Sita always associated  with the spiritual energy. The Vedas tell us that  

God creates two energies: material and spiritual.  Material nature is a temporary place which is full   of miseries. It can be thought of as a prison  house designed to act as a playground for the   wayward souls who desire to imitate God. The  spiritual energy is a direct expansion of God, so  

It inherits all of His pure qualities. God is so  kind that even while living in the material world,   one can associate with the spiritual energy.  We can do this by engaging in bhakti-yoga,   or devotional service. There is no difference  between God and His names, forms, and pastimes.  

Sita Devi associated directly with the spiritual  energy by dedicating all her thoughts, words,   and deeds to God’s personal form of Lord  Rama. She also regularly recited His name,   thought of Him, offered Him prayers, and  assisted Him in pastimes. In this way,  

We see that Sita herself was completely  spiritual. Though assuming a human body,   she never directly associated with material  nature, which is also known as maya. Ravana, on the other hand, was completely  engrossed in material life. This immediately   disqualified him from ever having Sita’s  association. The spiritually enlightened  

Can never be coaxed into mixing with the  gross materialists. By the same token,   the non-devotees can never touch God or  His associates. Ravana was a Rakshasa,   so he inherited all bad qualities from the  time of his birth. On a previous occasion,   Ravana’s mother was cursed by the  great sage Vishrava. She wanted to  

Bear a child with the sage, and since she  disturbed him while he was meditating,   the sage agreed to her desire but also cursed her  to have a Rakshasa son. Hence Ravana was born. Ravana regularly indulged in  intoxication, illicit sex,  

And meat eating. He would even eat human  flesh, for he and his associates would   regularly kill sages and then feast on their  flesh. There was no way Ravana could ever win   over a person as exalted as Sita. Instead  of explaining these finer points to Ravana,  

Sita tried to convey the message through  metaphors, illustrating absurdity by being absurd. In the first comparison, Sita states that Ravana  surely wishes to swim across an ocean with a rock   tied around his neck. Obviously if a person  tried this, they would sink. An ocean is hard  

Enough to cross without having a huge weight  pulling you down beneath the surface of the   water. Sita warned Ravana that if he tried to  forcibly win her over, he would surely drown. In the next comparison, Sita states that  Ravana surely had a wish to acquire the  

Sun and the moon using his hands. In the  modern age, scientists have developed a   way to get to the moon, but only after much  endeavor. After spending millions of dollars,   all they have done is land there in costly  spacesuits. They haven’t learned anything, nor  

Have they advanced their material condition, which  is what they were after in the first place. Hence,   the moon still eludes them since they haven’t  found any use for it. The sun is a completely   different story. Even today’s scientists aren’t  silly enough to try to go to the sun. One will  

Surely be burned to death before they could even  get close to the sun’s surface. In this way,   Sita warned Ravana that he would also  die if he tried to forcibly win her over. In the third comparison, Sita states that  Ravana surely wishes to bind a flaming fire  

With a piece of cloth. A small fire is not  very hard to put out or contain. Taking a   simple rag and swatting at the fire can usually  put it out. Even a fire extinguisher can do the   trick. If the fire gets any bigger, it  really becomes a problem. It seems like  

Every year there is at least one wild forest  fire that rages across the state of California   which officials can’t control. They do their  best to try to thin the forests of dry brush,   but Mother Nature always seems to thwart their  efforts. Once the fire gets big enough, it takes  

On a life of its own. In a similar manner,  Lord Rama’s power was like that of a blazing   fire. Ravana was a tiny rag compared to Rama,  thus by trying to steal away the Lord’s wife,   he would surely be burned to death by the  blazing fire represented by Rama’s arrows.

In fact, this is pretty much what happened,  except it wasn’t Rama’s arrows, but the burning   tail of a monkey. Lord Rama was God Himself,  so naturally He had many devotees who were   willing to step up and serve Him. Lord Hanuman, a  Vanara [monkey-like human], was one such devotee.  

After Ravana kidnapped Sita, Hanuman successfully  infiltrated the city of Lanka and made his way to   Ravana. The demon had Hanuman bound and then lit  his tail on fire. Through his devotional service,   Hanuman had attained all the yogic siddhis, or  perfections. He could make himself infinitely  

Small or large at any time. After his tail  was set on fire, Hanuman easily broke free   of the bonds of the rope by becoming small,  and then immediately assumed a large shape.   He then dragged his burning tail all around  the city of Lanka, shearing it of its beauty.

In the last comparison of these verses, Sita says  that Ravana surely wishes to walk on iron spikes.   This metaphor not only references Ravana’s  sinful desire to steal away Lord Rama’s wife,   but also material life in general. Whether  one is seeking bhukti [material enjoyment],  

Mukti [liberation from material activities],  or siddhi [perfection in yogic performance],   their path is riddled with pain and suffering  throughout. This is actually God’s mercy because   He doesn’t want us to associate with material  life. Shri Krishna is described as having an   eternal body, full of bliss and knowledge,  sach-chid-ananda. In a similar manner,  

Our souls are also eternally blissful,  but through contact with material nature,   we are forced into misery. Human life is meant  for reconnecting with the spiritual energy,   which will allow us to once again assume our  blissful spiritual body. One does not have to  

Wait until the time of death to reassume this  nature, for the eternally liberated devotees   are referred to as jivan-mukta, meaning  they are already free of material miseries. Ravana certainly wasn’t eligible to have  Sita as his wife. Since devotees are pious,  

Does it mean that they are eligible to  have Sita as their life partner? Pure   devotees know that Sita is only meant for  Rama. They are happiest when they see the   divine couple together. This is how Lakshmana,  Rama’s younger brother, felt. He left his own  

Wife at home in favor of serving Rama and  Sita. Lakshmana derived great pleasure from   protecting both Sita and Rama while they slept  during the night. This is how devotees think. Ravana wanted to take Sita and enjoy  her for himself. Devotees know that   Krishna is the original proprietor of  everything. Whatever comes their way,  

Devotees use towards God’s service. They are only  happy when in God’s association and they have no   desire to enjoy things that belong to Him. God  is pro-choice, in that He allows us to choose   which direction we want to go in. As Sita Devi  states, one who follows Ravana’s sinful path is  

Destined for destruction. Therefore we should  choose to be with God instead of against Him. CHAPTER 18 – DICHOTOMY “The difference between the son of Dasharatha  and yourself is like the difference between   gold and a base metal, sandalwood water  and mud, and an elephant and a cat in the  

Forest.” (Sita Devi speaking to Ravana,  Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.46) The material world is a place full of  dichotomies. There is hot and cold,   pain and pleasure, and strength and weakness. In  some instances, simple dualities are insufficient   in accurately describing a particular object’s  potency or power. In this regard, more detailed  

Comparisons are necessary, where certain objects  or creatures are compared to others. For example,   there is a common expression used to  describe heavy rain. People will say   “It’s pouring outside”, meaning that the rain  is flowing down so steadily that it appears  

That someone is pouring the water out of a  container. These types of comparisons better   illustrate certain situations and predicaments.  In a similar manner, comparisons are also used   to describe both the strengths possessed by God  and the limited powers possessed by human beings.

Now this may seem like a needless task. “Of course  God is great. Why would we need to describe His   greatness?” This seems true in theory, but in  reality we see a different situation. The Vedas  

Tell us that the current age we live in is known  as Kali Yuga, or the dark age. It is characterized   by the overall lack of adherence to dharma, or  religiosity, in society. If we do a quick study,  

We’ll see that this is indeed true. How many  of us spend time thinking about God during   the course of the day? Among those of us who do,  how much time is spent thinking about God versus   time spent thinking about our daily needs arising  from work, school, or family? If we answered these  

Questions honestly, we’d see that the majority of  our time is spent worrying about our necessities   and our future fortunes. The rest of the time may  be spent lamenting over misfortunes of the past. This is the effect of Kali Yuga. The Vedas tell  us that man was almost completely pure at the  

Beginning of creation, during the period of time  known as the Satya Yuga. Each creation is divided   into four time periods, or Yugas, and dharma  reduces by one quarter with each successive   time period. Kali Yuga is the last Yuga before  the ultimate dissolution of the earth. People  

Today are committed to adharma instead of dharma.  Dharma is religiosity or occupational duty. There   are different dharmas assigned to different  people based on their personal qualities and   the work they perform, but all dharmas share one  thing in common: their aim is to help the soul  

Return to the spiritual world. Though many of us  falsely identify with our body, the real source of   our identity comes from the spiritual spark,  or soul, residing within us. Dharma involves   performing those duties which help the soul  avoid having to assume a material body again.

Something is designated as material if it  possesses gunas, or the material qualities   of goodness, passion, and ignorance. The  world we live in is not meant to be our   permanent home. It’s a sort of playground for  the wayward souls who want to falsely enjoy the  

Senses. Lord Krishna is the Supreme Personality  of Godhead, and one of His names is Hrishikesha,   meaning the master of the senses. Since  He is the master of all the senses,   real pleasure can only come from serving Him. In  the conditioned state, the living entity becomes  

A servant to their own senses, or go-dasa. Dharma  is a set of law codes and recommended activities   that allows one to please the master of all  the senses, thus becoming a master of their  

Own senses in the process. The goal of human life  is to go from being the slave to the master of   the senses. By controlling our material sense  urges, we can execute pure devotional service   to the Lord. At the time of death, those who wish  to associate with Krishna will get to return to  

His spiritual kingdom immediately, never having  to take birth or assume a material body again. When almost everyone around us is so  committed to adharma, how can we go   about pleasing Krishna? Well, before we can  please Him we have to understand who He is.  

God is omnipotent and omnipresent, and therefore  can never be fully understood by the human mind,   which is itself a part of the material creation.  The mind represents a subtle element of nature,   so it’s not something we can necessarily see,  but it certainly does exist. Though the mind  

Doesn’t come with us to the spiritual world, it  is still important since it can help shape our   consciousness. It is this very consciousness that  needs purification. Though God can never be truly   understood, the Vedas try to describe some of  His glories. In order to describe God in a way  

That people can understand, Vedic authorities use  techniques such as comparison and quantification. These techniques are helpful because we have  a limited understanding of the universe. Great   scholars and scientists of today are very proud  of their knowledge. They believe that they are  

On the cusp of discovering immortality,  thinking that if they do enough research,   they will find a way for man to live  forever. Using a little intelligence,   we can understand just how foolish these thoughts  are. For starters, all of us were born into  

Ignorance. The human infant is so helpless that it  can’t even feed itself. It’s not even intelligent   enough to know where, when, and how to go to  the bathroom. Babies are forced to wear diapers   and have them changed at regular intervals  by their guardians. As children get older,  

They take in more information through  the discovery process. Gradually they   become educated enough to become self-sufficient  adults who can meet the demands of their bodies. Some adults take it a step further. In every  society there will be an intelligentsia,   a group of people prone to cultivating  knowledge. Nevertheless, knowledge can  

Only be acquired through personal experience  and learning from others. Then there are the   geniuses like Albert Einstein and Sir Isaac  Newton who make great discoveries. Yet if   we apply a little intelligence, we’ll  quickly discover that even the greatest   scientist in the world has a very paltry  understanding of things. This should make  

Sense to us. How much intelligence can a  person really have if they had to acquire   all their knowledge? In the grand scheme of  things, human beings don’t live that long,   so they don’t have the time to study each and  every person and geographic area in the world.

No matter how intelligent we may think  we are, no one in the world is smarter   than God. He is the oldest person, so  He has seen all there is to see and   experienced all there is to experience.  Lord Krishna is the original person,  

Adyam purana-purusham. God is also the  only person in the world who never had to   be taught anything. He has always been God;  He didn’t need to take any college courses,   read any books, or perform any experiments. God  is always God; it is not a title one can acquire.

These facts seem simple enough to understand, but  we see that many people either forget God or don’t   spend any time thinking about Him. Then there  are those who are openly atheistic, thinking that   there is no God. Once they acquire enough wealth,  fame, and intelligence, they take themselves to be  

The supreme controller, the ruler of the world.  This was precisely the case with the Rakshasa   demon Ravana many thousands of years ago during  the Treta Yuga. He too was a mortal living entity,   born as a son of the sage Vishrava. Yet through  the performance of severe austerities, Ravana was  

Gifted with many power augmenting boons by the  demigods. He then used his newly acquired powers   to wreak havoc throughout the world, defeating  many great kings and stealing away their wives. Ravana’s folly was that he took himself to  be invincible. Though he had to work so hard  

To achieve his fame and fortune, he never  thought that there might be a God who was   more powerful than himself. Ravana thought the  demigods were the most powerful living entities,   and having outsmarted them, he believed  he was the head honcho of the universe.  

His hubris deluded him into thinking that he  could have the wife of Lord Rama, Sita Devi. At the same time that Ravana was terrorizing the  innocent people of the world, Lord Krishna had   appeared on earth in the guise of a human being,  the warrior prince named Rama. As part of His  

Pastimes, Lord Rama roamed the wilderness of India  for fourteen years alongside His younger brother,   Lakshmana, and wife, Sita Devi. Sita  was an incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi,   so naturally she was the most beautiful woman  in the world. Not only was she beautiful,  

But she was chaste and committed to dharma  as well, thus making her a worthy spouse   of the prince of Ayodhya. Ravana had hundreds  of wives, but after hearing of Sita’s beauty,   he insisted on having her. He set up a diversion  which lured Rama and Lakshmana away from their  

Cottage in the forest, thus opening the  door for him to come and approach Sita. Ravana’s plan was simple enough. He had  carried away many beautiful women before,   so he didn’t think this would be that difficult.  After all, Rama was only roaming the forests  

Due to the demands of His father, Maharaja  Dashratha of Ayodhya. Ravana essentially thought,   “What can this man do to me? He doesn’t even  have a kingdom; He lives like a homeless man.   This woman is way too beautiful to be His  wife. I will take her without a fight.”

“The difference between the son of Dasharatha  [Rama] and yourself is like the difference   between a lion and a jackal of the forest, a sea  and a brook, and fine wine and Sauviraka [a sour,   fermented wheat drink]. The difference  between the son of Dasharatha and yourself  

Is like the difference between gold and  a base metal, sandalwood water and mud,   and an elephant and a cat in the forest. The  difference between the son of Dasharatha and   yourself is like the difference between Garuda  [son of Vinata and king of birds] and a crow,  

A peacock and a diver bird, and a swan and a  vulture [flesh-eating bird]. Even if you steal   me away, Rama, standing against you in battle  with His bow and arrows, having prowess equal   to that of Lord Indra, will make sure that  you will not live very long, like a mosquito  

That has swallowed ghee.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 47.45-48) Sita vehemently opposed Ravana’s  advances. In the above referenced quote,   she is comparing his strength to that of  Rama’s. She is reminding Ravana of who   God is and what He is capable of. Sita  was an authority on God’s greatness,  

For she was a perfect devotee and servant  of Lord Rama. If we want to understand the   glories of the Lord, we should take instruction  from someone who knows Him, i.e. the devotees. Lord Rama is like a lion and Ravana is like a  jackal. Rama is brave, courageous, and strong,  

Whereas Ravana is a sneaky little thief. Rama  is like the sea, while Ravana is a lowly brook.   The brook has limited powers, especially  when compared to the sea. Often times,   the movements of the brook are directed by  the more powerful sea. In a similar manner,  

Rama is God Himself, and is thus responsible for  all the activities conducted by Mother Nature. Lord Rama is like fine wine, while Ravana is like  Sauviraka, a sour, fermented alcoholic drink. God   is great, and everything associated with Him  is beautiful and opulent. The living entities,  

Especially the demons, are tiny and puny. The  material objects that we derive enjoyment from   can be thought of as cheap and tasteless when  compared to God’s enjoyment. Rama is like gold,   while Ravana is like iron or another inferior  metal. Gold is very commonly used to describe  

Something or someone’s greatness, thus  making it an apt comparison to God. Lord Rama is like sandal paste, while  Ravana is like mud. Sandalwood scents   and sandal paste are staples of Vedic  rituals and traditions. The fragrance is   both purifying and pleasant. Mud is just  the opposite; it is considered dirty and  

Something that needs to be removed from the  body. God is completely pure and fragrant,   while the living entities who associate  with maya are considered contaminated. It   is not until one associates with God in  a loving way that they become purified.

Rama is like an elephant and Ravana is like a cat.  During Vedic times, elephants played an important   role, especially during military battles. An  elephant is extremely strong and difficult to   control, whereas a cat’s strength is miniscule.  Rama is like Garuda and Ravana is like an ordinary  

Crow. Garuda is the king of birds and the carrier  of Lord Vishnu. Krishna is the original form   of God, and Vishnu is His primary expansion.  Rama was considered an incarnation of Vishnu,   thus the comparison to Garuda was appropriate.  There is no bird that is stronger or faster than  

Garuda, so by comparing Ravana to a crow, Sita is  saying that he could never be stronger than God. Sita also used two other bird comparisons,  stating that Rama was like a peacock and a swan,   while Ravana was like a diver bird and a  falcon/vulture. Lord Krishna wears the peacock  

Feather in His hair, so this automatically makes  the peacock an auspicious animal. The comparison   to a swan [hamsa] is also appropriate because  Lord Krishna once incarnated as a swan. A swan   has the ability to accept a mixture of milk and  water and only drink the milk portion. This means  

That they can carefully extract the good things  out of whatever is given to them. Similarly,   exalted devotees are also referred to as great  swans, paramahamsas, because they accept the   essence of life, Lord Krishna. A vulture, on  the other hand, is known for eating carcasses,  

So it was an apt comparison to Ravana, who as a  Rakshasa was accustomed to eating animal flesh. There is a vast difference between the living  entities and God. Our powers are both small   and limited, whereas God’s are both large and  unlimited. Rama would show His greatness by  

Defeating and killing Ravana in battle after  he had kidnapped Sita, thus proving her words   to be true. Lord Rama is very nice, so there is  no reason to have enmity with Him. There is no   reason to be His competitor, for we will be much  better served becoming His devotee. Sita Devi,  

Hanuman, and Lakshmana view Rama as their  dearmost, well-wishing friend and thus   they enjoy eternal happiness. We can do the  same by regularly chanting the Lord’s names,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare  Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. CHAPTER 19 – AJITA INDRIYAH

“O Ravana, inevitably all of the  Rakshasas will be completely destroyed,   for they have a person like you, who is cruel,  stupid, and unable to control his senses,   for their king.” (Sita Devi speaking to  Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 48.22)

In this passage, Sita Devi, the wife of Lord  Rama, is chastising the Rakshasa demon Ravana   for trying to kidnap her. Ravana was  the king of the island city of Lanka,   so Sita is referencing the fact that  all of the citizens of Ravana’s city  

Will meet with destruction due to his  impious deeds. As events would play out,   Sita’s words would prove to be true, but we don’t  need to focus exclusively on Ravana’s actions to   see this principle in action, for recent history  shows us the dangers caused by impious leaders.

The 20th century was famous for its two  world wars. These wars were described as   such because they involved many countries  joining together and fighting for a common   cause. The geographic locations of the  participating countries spanned the globe,  

Thus the wars truly took on a global nature. What  resulted was the death of thousands of soldiers,   and also the complete destruction of many  cities. The second war was more famous. Its   protagonists were the leader of Germany, Adolph  Hitler, and the emperor of Japan. Hitler is one  

Of the more famous dictators in history, with his  name now being synonymous with tyranny, bigotry,   and an overall lack of character. Hitler was  indeed stupid, harsh, and lustful in his actions,   and thus his countrymen had to suffer as a result.  Germany was utterly destroyed during World War II,  

And the country required a committed effort from  the United States, through the Marshall Plan,   to rebuild it. The United States still has  a military presence in Germany to this day. Germany’s main ally was Japan. World War II  had already started without the United States  

Participating. Due to its geographic location,  America was isolated from the war’s hotspots of   Europe and Asia. This all changed on December 7,  1941, when Japan attacked an American naval base   in Pearl Harbor. This one act brought America  into the war, and it would prove to be costly  

For Japan. The United States committed thousands  of troops to the war effort, and they employed   all the military weapons that were common at the  time, including guns, tanks, and fighter jets.   The U.S. government was primarily concerned  with winning, so they knew that conventional  

Fighting wouldn’t guarantee an immediate victory.  After President Roosevelt died in office, Harry   Truman took over the reins and decided to drop two  atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima   and Nagasaki. The effects were devastating  and it immediately led to Japan’s surrender.

The decision to drop the two bombs has been the  subject of much controversy ever since. Many   view it as an extreme decision, something outside  the rules of warfare. In any military engagement,   there are certain rules and regulations that the  parties adhere to. Yet at the end of the day,  

War is war, meaning it is gruesome in nature, with  men taking arms for the express purpose of killing   one another. People value their own lives after  all, and also those of their countrymen, so they   are bound to look for ways to achieve victory more  quickly and in a decisive manner. Harry Truman  

Certainly was responsible for deciding to drop the  bombs, but a greater fault lay with the government   of Japan. Like Germany, Japan had a leader who  was sinful, stupid, and acted against the rules of   propriety. He had no justification for bombing the  United States, and for this impious act, thousands  

Of his citizens were killed in an instant. The  effects of the bombs were devastating on the   Japanese people, and to this day, the country is  still not allowed to have any type of military.

World War II was only one example out of hundreds  that show what can happen when a country has a bad   leader. Most of the governments of the world today  are led by atheists, or people who aren’t God  

Conscious. They take the body to be the beginning  and end of everything, so they gear their policies   around satisfying the demands of the body. To this  end, they gladly sanction the practices of animal   slaughter, and even abortion, to meet the dietary  and sexual desires of the citizens. The Vedas tell  

Us, however, that the first duty of a king is to  protect innocent life, especially those of cows. The cow is considered to be a mother  since it freely provides milk to the   rest of society. Even meat eaters make use out  of milk products, such as butter and cheese,  

So there is really no justifiable reason to  kill a cow. Today’s situation is so bad that   millions of cows are gathered in an organized  way and sent to slaughterhouses. A government   leader is responsible for stopping  this practice, or at the very least,  

Raising objections to it. Yet we see that most  don’t have any problem with slaughterhouses or   abortion. If innocent life is not protected,  how can a society claim to be civilized? The Vedas tell us that the other primary  duty of a government leader is to imbibe  

God consciousness in the citizens. This makes  sense because realizing God is the actual   purpose of human life. Sense gratification is  reserved for the lower species which aren’t   intelligent enough to conceive of a creator.  A fish doesn’t even know that it is wet,  

Nor does it know when to stop eating, so it  surely can’t understand that it is destined   to die some day. Human beings have the ability  to not only understand mortality, but to take   steps to stop it. How does one stop death? Lord  Krishna gives us the answer in the Bhagavad-gita.

We can’t avoid dying in our present body, but we  can make sure that we never take birth again. The   soul is eternal, but our material bodies are  not. Material bodies are compared to clothing;   they are put on at some time, and then given  up later on. The soul, which forms the basis of  

Identity, remains intact. A person who thinks  of Krishna, or God, at the time of death,   never has to take birth again, which also  means that they will never die again. It is the responsibility of a king or government  leader to make sure that their citizens are taking  

Steps to liberate themselves from the cycle of  birth and death. Protecting innocent life is the   first step in the process. If we are allowed  to kill the innocent, we surely will have to   suffer in the afterlife. Just as a good king  helps people to make spiritual advancement,  

A poor leader takes people further and further  away from the aim of life. This was the case   with Ravana, a Rakshasa demon who terrorized the  people of the earth many thousands of years ago. Lord Krishna is the Supreme Personality of  Godhead, as stated in the Vedas. Essentially,  

Krishna is God, but the title of “Supreme  Personality of Godhead” more accurately describes   Him. God is someone that most of us know exists,  but we’re not really too sure of anything beyond   that. What does He look like? What does He teach?  What are His names? The Vedas try to answer these  

Questions by describing His names, qualities,  forms, and pastimes. By stating that Krishna is   the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the Vedas tell  us that Krishna is a person, the most powerful of   all, and the source of all incarnations. Godhead  means that God can take unlimited numbers of  

Personal expansions. A personal expansion  is equal to God in potency. For example,   Lord Krishna’s primary personal expansion is that  of Lord Vishnu. Vishnu then descends to earth   in various forms known as avataras to perform  pastimes. Though the names and activities may  

Be different, all of these forms, technically  known as vishnu-tattva, can be taken as God. One such incarnation of Lord Vishnu was Lord  Rama, a handsome and pious kshatriya prince   who appeared on earth during Ravana’s time.  In fact, Rama’s appearance was the direct  

Result of the petition of the demigods, who  were cowering in fear of Ravana. The demon   had procured several boons that granted him  immunity in battle from celestials, animals,   and all other living entities, except human  beings. Lord Vishnu thus appeared in the form  

Of a human being specifically to kill Ravana  and alleviate the suffering of the world. Rama’s wife was Sita Devi, the princess of Videha.  She was extremely beautiful and pious. Her glories   were further enhanced by her pure devotion to  Lord Rama. They say that beauty is in the eye of  

The beholder, meaning that what one person finds  beautiful, another person may not. This was not   the case with Sita, for she was universally  appreciated. There is no woman on this earth   more beautiful than one who is devoted in thought,  word, and deed to God. In this way, Sita possessed  

Both inner and outer beauty. Ravana was the king  of Lanka, and had hundreds of beautiful queens.   As the leader of the people, he set the example  to follow. Spending all his time eating meat,   drinking wine, and cavorting with his many wives,  Ravana wasn’t satisfied. He became lusty after  

Sita, and was dead set on doing whatever it would  take to have her as his wife. It was due to this   lust that Sita described Ravana as ajita-indriyah,  meaning one who has not conquered the senses. Lord Rama was extremely powerful and unbeatable  in battle, so there was no chance for Ravana  

To steal Sita away while in Rama’s presence.  To accomplish his desires, the demon created   a diversion whereby Rama and His younger  brother, Lakshmana, were lured away from the   group’s camp in the forest of Dandaka. Ravana then  appeared before Sita in the guise of a brahmana,  

Or pious mendicant. Sita received him nicely,  not realizing it was Ravana. The demon tried   his best to win Sita over peacefully, but she  was having none of it. Finally, Ravana revealed   himself and demanded that Sita come with him.  Sita Devi sternly rebuked him and in the above  

Referenced quote, she warns him that his impious  act will lead to the destruction of his city. Sure enough, her words would hold  true. Ravana would kidnap Sita,   forcing Rama and His army of Vanaras, led  by Hanuman, to march to Lanka and battle  

The Rakshasas. The city of Lanka was destroyed,  all the great Rakshasas killed, including Ravana,   and Rama emerged victorious. The people of  the city of Lanka surely were worthy of pity,   for their lives were ruined due to the actions  of their leader. More than anything else,  

Ravana made the mistake of offending God  and His devotee, Sita. Leaders of society   should not cause enmity with the saintly class of  men. The devotees are the best welfare workers;   they love God and try to spread His glories  to others in a peaceful manner. The Rakshasas  

Were addicted to their sinful way of life, thus  death was a very painful experience for them. In   a similar manner, death can be very painful to us  if we keep an attachment to impious activities. Sita Devi was very intelligent. She knew  Rama’s greatness and His dedication to  

His bhaktas. She knew that Ravana didn’t  stand a chance if he were to kidnap her.   She tried her best to warn the demon, but he  wouldn’t listen. She, being a saintly person,   felt pity for Ravana’s associates since they  were destined to die due to Ravana’s actions.  

The lesson we can learn is that it is better  to associate with Lord Rama’s associates,   the devotees, than to be with Ravana’s associates,  the Rakshasas. The demons meet with doom,   while the devotees are always protected. In  this age, the only way to have true peace  

In society is to associate with God  by regularly chanting His holy names,   “Hare Krishna Hare Krishna, Krishna Krishna, Hare  Hare, Hare Rama Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare”. CHAPTER 20 – MUKUNDA “O Rakshasa, It might be possible for a person to  live for a long time after forcibly taking away  

Shachi Devi, a woman of unmatched beauty and wife  of the wielder of the thunderbolt [Indra]. But a   person who abuses me shall not be released from  death even if they were to drink amrita [nectar   which grants immortality].” (Sita Devi speaking  to Ravana, Valmiki Ramayana, Aranya Kand, 48.24)

One of Lord Krishna’s names is Mukunda,  meaning one who grants liberation. The   Vedas tell us that reincarnation is a fact  and that the soul constantly transmigrates   from one body to another until it becomes  eligible for liberation, which represents  

The end of reincarnation. Lord Krishna is the  Supreme Personality of Godhead, thus He is the   only person able to grant this great reward,  which is known as moksha or mukti in Sanskrit. Lord Krishna is God but we see that followers of  the Hindu faith often worship many gods. Those  

Who are ignorant of Vedic teachings are often  led to believe the false notion that Hindus   don’t believe in a single god and that they are  polytheistic. This is not the case, for the Vedas   decisively state that Hari, one of Lord Krishna’s  names, is the original form of God. There are,  

However, thousands of highly elevated living  entities known as devatas. In English parlance,   this translates to a demigod, meaning someone  who is godly. What does it mean to be godly?   The demigods have extraordinary strength and  powers not available to the common man. This  

Is by design, for Lord Krishna needs someone to  manage the affairs of the creation. The material   world is considered to be a representation of  the Lord’s inferior energy. Spirit is always   superior to matter because without spirit,  matter would be useless. We see this fact on  

Full display at the time of a person’s death.  The only difference between a living body and   a dead one is the presence of the soul. Thus we  can conclude that spirit is superior to matter. The spiritual energy is God’s superior energy,  something which He directly associates with. We  

Are also spirit by nature, but we are considered  God’s separated expansions. This means that we are   god-like in quality, but far inferior to Him in  quantitative powers. The living entities, or jiva   souls, can most certainly associate with material  nature, or God’s inferior energy. The Supreme  

Lord is the creator of maya, or the illusory  energy that pervades the material creation,   but He can never be touched by it. Therefore,  He deputes other advanced living entities,   known as demigods, to take charge of running  various departments of creation. There are  

Demigods in charge of creation, maintenance,  dissolution, providing rain, doling out wealth,   and granting learning ability. The chief  demigods are Lord Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva.   Of these three, Lord Vishnu is considered superior  because He is a direct, personal expansion of Lord  

Krishna. Though Vishnu maintains, He still remains  aloof from the affairs of the material creation.   Essentially there is no difference between  Vishnu and Krishna except in Their appearance. The demigods are highly advanced, but with the  exception of Lord Vishnu, they too suffer through  

Birth and death. Lord Brahma lives for billions  of years; he is the first created living entity   and the last one to die. Yet just because he lives  a lot longer than us, it doesn’t mean that Lord   Brahma is immortal. In a spiritual sense, we are  all immortal because our souls never take birth,  

Nor do they die. However, the concepts of  liberation and immortality really apply to   the residence of the soul. Liberation, or  moksha, means the soul never has to take   birth in the material world again. A liberated  soul achieves the same nature as God, for the  

Supreme Lord never associates with His inferior  energy. So in this regard, no living entity,   including a demigod, can grant liberation.  This can only come from Lord Krishna’s grace. A point to note here, however, is that Lord  Shiva can also sometimes grant liberation.  

They say that if a person quits their body while  in the holy city of Kashi, Lord Shiva whispers   the name of Rama into their ear, thus granting  them liberation. In these cases, it seems that   Lord Shiva is granting moksha, but it is actually  occurring through Lord Krishna’s will. Krishna is  

The original form of God, with Vishnu being His  primary expansion. To enact pastimes on earth,   Vishnu descends and appears in various guises.  When God descends to earth in the form of a   living entity, He is known as an avatara,  or incarnation. One of Vishnu’s most famous  

Incarnations was that of Lord Rama, a pious  kshatriya prince who appeared on earth during   the Treta Yuga. Lord Shiva is known as Mahadeva,  meaning the greatest demigod. He is described   as such not only for his extraordinary powers,  but also for his great devotion to Lord Vishnu.

Of all of Vishnu’s forms, Lord Rama is Lord  Shiva’s favorite. The Adhyatma Ramayana found   in the Brahmanda Purana contains a narration of  the events of Lord Rama’s life, as told by Lord   Shiva to his wife, Parvati Devi. Lord Shiva is  such a great devotee that he only likes to speak  

About Lord Rama. He was very excited to tell the  story of Rama to his wife. In this way, we see how   a marriage can be made perfect. The husband should  be viewed as the foremost deity for the wife.  

This means that it is the duty of the husband  to discuss spiritual matters with his wife,   for they will both benefit from this. Devotees  are always benefitted by speaking about the Lord,   and the recipients of such instruction gain  invaluable spiritual knowledge as a result.

Why would a person be granted liberation  by hearing Lord Rama’s name in their ear?   In the Bhagavad-gita, Lord Krishna tells us  that those who think of God at the time of   death never have to take birth again. This is  because our consciousness at the time we quit  

Our body determines the type of body we receive  in the next life. Our consciousness at a specific   point in time is not something we can necessarily  control, for it is developed over the course of   our lifetime. We have certain things that we think  about while we go to sleep each night, and these  

Things can change over time. The consciousness at  the time of death represents the sum total of all   the experiences of our current life, and even  previous ones. Thus it is very hard to ensure   that we’ll think about God at the time of death,  so Lord Shiva kindly helps the process along.

It is also said that those who die while residing  on the banks of the holy river Ganges also receive   liberation. In the Vedic tradition, the  Ganges River is taken to be a demigod,   Mother Ganga. Again it appears that  a demigod is granting liberation,  

But this is actually not the case. Ganga Devi  is considered sacred because she flows from the   lotus feet of Lord Vishnu. Lord Shri Krishna  Chaitanya Mahaprabhu has declared that just   as Lord Krishna is worshipable, so is His  land. Essentially this means that anything  

Directly associated with Krishna is to be  worshiped in the same manner as one would   worship the Supreme Lord Himself. Since Ganga  Devi comes from the lotus feet of the Lord,   she is non-different from Him. Therefore,  anyone who quits their body while near the  

Water coming from Vishnu’s feet increases  their likelihood of attaining moksha. Based on the authorized statements of the Vedas,  we see that only God Himself can grant liberation.   Hence He is known by the name of Mukunda, or one  who grants mukti. The atheist class, however,  

Don’t realize this. From the beginning of  time, there has been an ongoing struggle   between the demigods and the demons, who  are also known as asuras. The demigods are   known as suras because they are devotees by  nature. An asura is the opposite of a sura,  

Meaning they don’t believe in God. The asuras  constantly clash with the suras because they   think that if the godly class is defeated, worship  of God will stop. Instead of believing in God,   asuras view the Lord as a competitor. They would  rather people worship them instead of Krishna.

During Lord Rama’s time, there was one asura in  particular, known by the name of Ravana, who had   risen to power. Ravana was a Rakshasa, a demon  with ghastly physical attributes. Rakshasas are   meat eaters who range the night while terrorizing  the innocent. They have no problem eating human  

Flesh. They are expert in illusion and not afraid  to use their black magic powers when battling   others. Ravana was quite powerful due to boons  he received from Lord Brahma and Lord Shiva. This   certainly seems a bit odd. Why would the godly  class grant boons to sinful people? Unlike God,  

The devatas are required to give away benedictions  to whoever worships them properly. This is how   material nature works. Since matter is part of  God’s inferior energy, the Lord has no direct   interest in it. God doesn’t play favorites when  it comes to material fortunes or misfortunes.  

Matter is dull and inferior and something we  should strive to break free from, hence the   Lord does not consider anything in terms of good  or bad as it relates to the body and the senses. Nevertheless, the living entities are stuck  associating with matter by default. Living  

Entities have different desires and possess  varying levels of intelligence, so there will   always be people who wish to increase their  material possessions and opportunities for   sense gratification. These people are known as  karmis, or fruitive workers. It is the duty of  

The demigods to facilitate the requests of the  karmis. Since there is no distinction between   good or bad on a material level, the devatas  must grant benedictions to whoever pleases them,   regardless of the motive. Ravana, being an  atheist, was especially intent on increasing his  

Fighting powers. After he got what he wanted from  the demigods, he went to war against the saintly   class. He even defeated his own brother,  the treasurer of the demigods, Kuvera. Ravana was extremely wealthy and ruled over a  beautiful island known as Lanka. He had hundreds  

Of wives, but one day he heard of a beautiful  woman, Sita Devi, who was residing in the forest   of Dandaka. Sita was Lord Rama’s wife, and she had  accompanied her husband on His sojourn through the   woods. Ravana set up a ruse which lured Rama  and His younger brother, Lakshmana, away from  

Their cottage, leaving Sita all by herself.  Ravana approached Sita and propositioned her. Sita was no ordinary human being. When  God appears on earth, His pleasure potency   expansions from the spiritual world come with  Him. Sita was an incarnation of Goddess Lakshmi,  

The wife of Lord Vishnu in the spiritual  world. Sita was ever devoted to Rama and   never thought of another man during her entire  life. She sternly rebuked Ravana. Undeterred,   the demon prepared to steal her  away. In the above referenced quote,  

Sita warns him of what will happen if he  should perpetrate such an iniquitous deed. In battles between the suras and asuras,  Lord Indra is usually the leader of the   demigod army. He wields the thunderbolt and is  considered very powerful. Sita makes reference  

To the fact that one has a possibility of  remaining alive should they steal Indra’s wife,   Shachi. Stealing another’s wife is an act of  vikarma. Karma actually refers to prescribed duty,   or those actions which allow one to advance  to a higher position in the next life. It is  

Similar to the theory of evolution, but this is an  evolution of the soul and not the species. Vikarma   is abominable activity; those actions which lead  to demotion to a lower species in the next life.   Stealing another’s wife is quite a deplorable act,  so one surely suffers the consequences. However,  

The punishment doesn’t always come about right  away. Sometimes a person desires to sin even   more. In these instances, the laws of nature  allow the person to remain alive so that they   can act out their desires. Not only can such  a person remain alive, but they even have a  

Chance at moksha, or liberation. There is always  an opportunity for repentance and forgiveness. Sita Devi accurately stipulates that this  opportunity for moksha doesn’t exist for   one who insults her. This is because Sita is  a pure devotee of God, His most beloved of  

Associates. The Supreme Lord is neutral when it  comes to issues relating to the material world,   but this isn’t the case for His devotees. The  Lord doesn’t mind being insulted personally,   for He even appreciates insults  when they come from His intimate   associates like Sita Devi or  Shrimati Radharani. However,  

He never tolerates ill-treatment towards  His devotees. Sita is informing Ravana   that even if he should drink nectar which grants  immortality [amrita], he still won’t escape death. The irony is that Ravana did eventually  go through with kidnapping Sita, but he   still received liberation. This is a special  circumstance, however, as Ravana was directly  

Killed by Lord Rama, or God. Since Ravana was  thinking of the Supreme Lord at the time of death,   he was granted a specific type of liberation.  Sita Devi’s comments are still noteworthy,   for we should never create enmity with the  devotees of God. Sita is kind and sweet,  

And the giver of great wealth and fortune.  All the money that we possess should be   considered her property, so we  should use it in the right way. One of Krishna’s names is Madhava, meaning the  husband of the goddess of fortune. This means that  

All the fortune that Lakshmi possesses is used  for God’s benefit. We should use the blessings   Lakshmiji gives to us for the same purpose.  All of our activities should be dedicated to   the Supreme Lord. Acting in this way will make  us happy. Ravana tried to steal Lakshmi and use  

Her for his own benefit, and it ultimately  led to the downfall of his city and all its   inhabitants. Due to the special circumstance,  Ravana received the liberation of merging into   the Lord’s body. For the devotees, however, God  bestows the boon of His eternal association,  

Which is a far greater reward than mukti.  Sita, Lakshmana, and Hanuman are eternal   servants of Lord Rama. If we remember and  honor the Lord with our thoughts, words,   and deeds, we too can receive the highest form  of liberation, Krishna-prema, or love for God. ###

Thank you for reading. All  content authored by Sonal Pathak.

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