Showing posts with label Aurovalley Ashram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aurovalley Ashram. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2013

DECEMBER AT AUROVALLEY

In the center of the world!
It was a very busy month as I moved into the role of 'staff' here at the ashram. I was helping register people, book taxis, preparing rooms, serving meals, regulating the hot water and attending to visitors needs. All in all, it was a very good learning lesson in how to stay connected while still dealing with the pressures and stresses around you. Phew, a much harder lesson than I thought it would be. But I made it and I'm so grateful for the opportunity to  have taken part of the inauguration of the World Temple. You can read more about it here: http://www.aurovalley.com/index.php/aurovalley-ashram/world-temple

The two videos below are of the World Temple being decorated with flags and a Punjabi sibling quartet making music.


World Temple getting pretty for inauguration


Me and the little girl, Sonum, I tried to bribe into going to school - only worked for a few days. She prefers playing and running around the World Temple site.

Food serving team (me, Sara and Saroj)


Taking a break

Water bottles and soil that was placed under the tree at the World Temple - here in the meditation hall to recieve the blessing from Sri Aurobindo and The Mother first


School children watch the ceremony



Monday, December 31, 2012

A NEW YEAR, ANOTHER MOMENT

2012 has gone by in a flash but isn’t that how we always describe each year as its nearing its end? There’s bound to be the usual discussion with friends and family how it’s been a good year and how you’re looking forward to 2013 and although you say you don’t make New Year’s resolutions you privately tell yourself you’ll workout more, eat healthier, be less negative and generally try to be better. But when you’re on your own and reflect on the year gone by you can’t help but think about all the things you didn’t accomplish. And you tell yourself and others you don’t believe in regret but for some reason you can’t help wishing you had taken that extra step, gave it another go, taken that risk, fallen through on that crazy idea, skipped tradition, chased your childhood dream but you tell yourself, ‘next year. I always have next year.’ But that’s just it, you may not.

As I sit here now in the bubble that is Aurovalley ashram (www.aurovalley.com) situated in an open valley surrounded by the Ganga and the Himalayan foothills, I’m not immune to the uproar that is going on all over India. A young female University student who had been brutally raped and tortured by 6 men on a moving bus in New Delhi succumbed to her horrific injuries and passed away Saturday.  That girl with all her hopes and dreams, who has left the Earth with the world outraged by this brutality, won’t get next year. She won’t get a chance to think about all that she accomplished and all she still hopes to accomplish. She won’t get another chance to contemplate following through on that difficult but so rewarding task, she won’t get to chase her dreams. It’s too late for her. But it’s not too late for you and me.
As the New Year rolls in and I look back to the year that was, I realize that for the first time ever I did exactly what I wanted.  I didn’t hold back, I followed my heart and lived a crazy adventure. Yet I too wonder, did I live to the maximum, did the fire in me burn for life at every moment, and did I push my ego out of the way and let the Universe play? The answer is no, not entirely. I let fear, doubt and negativity take hold every once in a while and it was at those times I lost balance and made decisions that weren’t in tune with what my soul yearned for - to find my true self : the deepest, purest, unchanging part of me that has all the answers.  I’m finally beginning to understand what living means. And for me it is not about waking up and thinking ‘another day of work, here I go,’ nor is it about thinking about the million other things I would prefer to be doing nor is it about thoughts of tomorrow and all the things I should get done. No that ain’t living, at least not for me. I’m done being me. I’m done being reduced to just thoughts, emotions and a body.  I always wondered as a kid, what else? This can’t be all. Who knew a 13 year old kid would be onto something when she thought to herself, ‘why do we wake up every day and take a breath? What for?’ 19 years later and the answers are being revealed to me.
So as the clock strikes 12 and you pause to reflect, remember that you’ve just been given another chance, another moment to seize, another opportunity to pull the drapes back and let your soul shine. And if you don’t understand anything of what I’ve said, close your eyes and know that somewhere deep within your soul knows exactly what I mean.  

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

DIWALI AT AUROVALLEY


Nov. 13, 2012
This was the best Diwali celebration I've had that I can remember. It was filled with light and not just from the hundreds of candles we lit in the meditation hall and around the entire ashram but light also from deep within. I felt the darkness diminishing inside and I could sense my soul begin to glow. And it was so beautiful sensing this inside myself as well as seeing the light shining from those around me. The day was filled with a charged energy and it ended aptly with fireworks at the world temple site (read more about this amazing building to open on 12.12.12 here: http://www.aurovalley.com/index.php/aurovalley-ashram/world-temple) followed by Om chanting. However I was given another beautiful gift after I came back to my room. Diana (Colombian woman who basically runs this place with Swamiji - she's been here 10 years) called me to wish me a Happy Diwali and to tell me I have a sweet presence which she thanked me for. It was so unexpected and so lovely to hear. My heart is light to today in every sense of the word. I am grateful for this beautiful life.
Some pictures from last night (and general ones) not taken by me since my camera was not working. Enjoy!

 
Walk-way to the Meditation Hall
Inside the meditation hall
In the Om room -I'm leaning by far pillar on the left

 

 
Savitri Library&Om room ontop/ Building on the right: Yoga hall & music room uptop


 

Satsang (Q&A) with Swamiji in the library: I'm 3rd from the left in white
Renovated bookstore
The whole ashram with the view of the World Temple under construction (on the right)
Ashram kids in the Ganga

school & tailoring building and of course the beautiful palm trees





 

Monday, November 12, 2012

DANCE BABY DANCE - MY MISSION STATEMENT

Nov. 9, 2012 - inspiration from a road trip

It’s quite interesting how a shift in perspective can provide for such a different experience in something you’ve already been through. The view outside the car window as we pass through the towns that lie between Rishidwar and Delhi have more or less displayed the same reality the five times I’ve travelled  to and from; however, this time something is different. And if it isn’t what my eyes are seeing then it has to be how my eyes are seeing. Yes the side of the roads are still littered with garbage and small heaps of the trash is burning as the poisonous flames are being fumed in by those in close vicinity. The starving ‘holy’ cows fester on the left overs that haven’t already been snatched up by the stray dogs which in most cases are plastic bags. And of course there are the usual slums and begging children. But this time something is completely different. I don’t see these scenes as sad scenarios that have happened to people by an unfortunate set of circumstances. No. We did this. You, me, each one of us. We as a human race have put ourselves here in this mess. We’re so afraid. We’re afraid we’ll get left behind, we’re so afraid that if we let go and believe in a higher, greater good, we’ll get thrown under and our neighbour who didn’t get trapped by this so called ‘higher’ thinking will be one step ahead and closer to winning this apparent race we’re in. We’re all trying so hard to keep pushing forward without knowing what the destination is.  The old Puja wants to cry. The one that used to hurt for these souls, the one who used to see the pain in the eyes of a crippled beggar and pray she could make it all better. But not Me. I know I can never do enough in this physical world for these people. I can’t take away their pain permanently. Sure I can hand them rupees and perhaps make them smile for a little longer that day but that’s not going lift them up. A few extra rupees from my hand to theirs will only confirm a reality they’ve become so accustomed to. No. What I used to perceive as ‘helping’ isn’t helping. What I used to believe as ‘selfish’ is actually the only thing each of us can and should do. Be you and you 100%. Step up. Don’t quietly step into the position you think you’re meant to be in, the place you’re so convinced you’re supposed to be in, the situation you assume you should be in. Don’t accept the truth of what others tell you as the only one, don’t shy away from your own strength which can create or destroy anything. Don’t fear your own power, your own godliness. You, just you, have the power to change the world. Accept that truth. Don’t play in this world as though you’ve stepped into someone else’s sandbox. Your job is to build your own playground, build it any which way you like. Rip it up and make a mess, this world is yours to dance up a storm in. So stop being a wallflower, blast your own music and dance to your own rhythm and it may just be then that your neighbour will flow suite, crank his stereo and start busting a move. Dance folks, fucking dance your ASS OFF!!!!

Saturday, October 20, 2012

THE TRUTH


I always thought 'finding yourself' was when you took time to discover what your core personality was and how to strengthen it. But this isn't so, well at least it's not my definition anymore. Finding myself has been understanding WHAT I am not WHO I am according to my personality traits. It's the what one should be concerned about not the who. And the what is something I've been trying to understand my whole life. I thought being human meant being a mind, thoughts, body and soul and sure this is all true but there's a whole other part. The part that is in charge of the soul- that mysterious part of you that gives you intuitions sometimes. It's the part that runs the whole system. I mean have you ever stopped and wondered how your heart is pumping or mind running? Yes, cells which are made up of atoms and atoms are made up of an electron, proton and a nucleus. But what's giving energy to those particles? That's what I needed to know and not just intellectually but I needed to know it by realizing it. And this is where I couldn't use my intellect, for the first time, to understand something. I just needed physical and mental silence and my breath. John Mayer got it right when he wrote the song Bigger than my body. We are all much, much, much more than our body. We carry the Universe inside. It's quite spectacular, it is indeed!  

Friday, October 12, 2012

FROM ASHRAM TO THE 'REAL WORLD'

So I've been in Delhi for exactly 2 weeks now. I should have been back at the ashram by now but I've come down with a terrible cold that has me confined to my bed. Well not exactly 'my bed.' It would be the family friends' bed whose mansion I'm staying in. It's been very educational going from peaceful, insightful, harmonious ashram atmosphere to loud, chaotic, over stimulating Delhi. On the very comfortable four and half hour train journey from Haridwar to New Delhi I promised myself I would work hard to maintain my peaceful state and take time to meditate daily. I was doing great for the first  week and then boom I get sick. Actually I shouldn't have been that surprised, I always seem to fall sick when I visit Delhi. So even though I wasn't meditating for two hours daily I was managing to fit in one hour in the mornings and was also working out. I was back to running and lifting weights. I felt great.


The weekend came 5 days later and so I decided to visit my Pinky Masi (Masi is the term we use for your mother's sister - every other older Indian lady is an auntie) since my cousin, Mukul, works long hours during the week and I would have missed him otherwise. I thought I was in a for a daring adventure when I decided to take the Delhi Metro to the outskirts of Ghaziabad - a city 19km from Delhi- but nope, the metro was clean, efficient and smooth. I was impressed. It wasn't up to London's Overground train standards but close. I had a nice afternoon and evening with Masi, Mukul, Honey (his wife) and Arna (his daughter). I decided to stay till late afternoon the next day since it was really nice spending one-on-one time with my aunt. My uncle (maserji) passed away earlier this year.

I got sick after I ate stale almonds in Delhi- or at least I think that's what caused it. The next 24 hours were not fun, to say the least. Once I was back to feeling semi-normal, I went to Nehru place which is literally a computer nerds' heaven. It's a massive square jam-packed with tech stores, repair shops, and anything you can possibly think of related to computers.  I had to drop off my dear laptop to the Acer shop. My one last attempt to savage the device which has practically become family these past 11 months of travelling.  Two days later I found out it indeed had passed over to the other side - I know Acer is at peace in computer heaven.

Anyway I was still feeling a little queasy and I think a combination of that and the heat got to me and I fell ill - again! But this time I had a slight fever and a sore throat which then turned into the worst cold I've ever had. I was bed ridden for about 4 days straight. I'm still all stuffed up but I'm eager to head back to the ashram.

So before heading back I've decided to purchase a new laptop considering I plan on doing more writing and pen to paper still feels very primitive. I'm hoping to get in the routine of setting aside two hours a day to write. I know I can keep this up while at the ashram and I wanna take advantage of the tranquil atmosphere for the next couple of months. I really don't know how long I'm going to stay there, I just know I'm not quiet ready to face the world yet. I'm no longer habitually dabbling in negative self talk but I'm not exactly giving myself positive feedback either and I really need this positive self-talk especially since I'll be taking on new projects and looking into new endeavours like theatre in India. How fun would that be!

I met up with an old Woodstock friend, Jenny Kishan which was really nice. We chatted for a couple of hours as we filled each other in on the new direction our lives seem to be going. We're hoping to meet up again in Rishikesh in November.

That same evening I went on my first sight seeing venture in Delhi. I went to go see Hazrat Nizam-ud-din and the Qawwali (Urdu and Hindi religious  hymns sung by men). It was a cool experience but it was odd that they don't allow ladies into where the tomb is placed, especially considering Delhi is such a cosmopolitan city. When we asked why we weren't allowed in we were told it's because Nizamuddin never married. And so...??

I just gotta buy myself a new laptop and I'm all set to head back home...I mean the ashram. Home is where the heart is and right now that's where my heart is.

Big worship Hall - again we weren't allowed in all the way
Sweetidid and I outside the tomb - 'No ladies allowed inside' says the sign behind to my right

Qawwali singers - I felt like I was a part of a Bollywood film since this exact place was the location of a recent Bollywood film

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

COME WHAT MAY

I never set out to prove anything to myself or anyone else for that matter. I just knew it was time to get up and shake up my life. So before I was fired from a job that I had lost all interest in which was being felt among my colleagues, I decided to quit. See after suffering from depression for 12 years, I knew I couldn’t go on in a job that my heart wasn’t into. So in September of last year, I spoke to my bosses at CTV and gave them my two weeks’ notice. I told them I could stay longer if they needed me to do so but that in month’s time I was to go overseas to volunteer - At that point I didn’t even know if my application was accepted at the organization I was volunteering through- Globalteer. I didn’t care. I was suffocating. That’s what depression can do sometimes and if I didn’t take a deep breath soon my mind was going to explode. I never mentioned my depression at work. I was afraid the stigma that is so often attached to this mental illness would have been used against me and now when I look back I wish I had the courage to speak out. I do now.

My decline in interest at work began only six months after being encouraged to apply for the job by CTV Power Play’s former host. At the time I was working as a part-time chase producer for CTV News Channel in Toronto. Working in Ottawa for CTV’s political show would be a huge step up, as I was told by colleagues. I knew they were right but I wasn’t sure the move would be right for me. I knew by moving home not only would I be giving up my social life but any chance of having a career in acting - my true passion. At that point, my acting career, or lack there of, was going nowhere and I was afraid that if I didn’t jump at the offer I wouldn’t get such an opportunity again. But isn’t that just what we all think when we’re guided by our own misconceptions of what we think we ‘should’ do? So instead of listening to my own inner voice I let fear and doubt guide me – never a good way to make an important decision. So I packed up my little bachelor pad into boxes and headed to the capital city.

Once the initial excitement of having a new job began to subside, trying to keep up pretences increased. I figured it was the 10-6pm routine that had me doubting my decision of taking the job - I had shift work in Toronto, which seemed to suite me quiet well- so I tried to busy myself with ‘stuff’: seeing friends, shopping for yet more work clothes, spending time with family and taking weekend trips to Toronto. But I couldn’t shake the restlessness and I couldn’t make sense of the feelings of depression that were resurfacing. I had been off anti-depressants for about a year then and was naively optimistically about ever having to take them again.

None of it made sense. I was working a job so many other journalist grads would have loved to have. I was an associate producer for CTV’s Power Play with Don Martin - a political show hosted daily from the interiors of Parliament Hill. I was rubbing elbows with the decision makers of our country and the political elite. It was interesting, fun, stressful at times but I was part of something important. My whole life revolved around the job. At least once a week after work, my colleagues and I would hit the sparks street bars frequented by political journalists, MPs, their political staffers and anyone else addicted to the soap opera that is Ottawa politics. My blackberry was my life source and that darned blinking red light was always within my peripheral vision. I could have gone far if I wanted. The opportunities were endless; however, despite all this something was tugging at me.

I couldn’t help wondering what else. What was the purpose of my existence? When I had achieved my career goals then what? There had to be more, no? However these metaphysical questions that kept replaying in my mind weren’t getting me anywhere and they certainly weren’t helping with the symptoms of depression that were resurfacing: the inability to focus and concentrate for long. So after reluctantly admitting to myself that the thick cloud fogging my brain was in fact depression, I was back on my ever so reliable anti-depressants, Celexa. For the next eight months I excused my feelings of restlessness as symptoms of depression and tried to keep my head a float at work. To keep my mind occupied from thoughts of ‘what else’ I took up volunteering with Mood Disorders Ottawa where I was facilitating group sessions in hopes that by focusing on others’ mental illnesses I would get my mind off my own. I also got back into acting and was heading off to rehearsals in the evenings for a play that was to be staged that summer. I should have been so happy, so why wasn’t I?

It would have been easier to justify quitting work if the situation at the office was unbearable but the thing was, everyone at the office was wonderful. I liked my colleagues. It was the person I was becoming I didn’t like – bitter, frustrated and indifferent about my existence. However, what cemented my decision to quit were the all too frequent drives home after work where I found myself sobbing for no apparent reason and having recurring thoughts of death. My restlessness was making my depression worse and I knew I didn’t have the strength this time to pull myself back out from the dark hole that is depression.

When word got out I was leaving work to volunteer overseas, those around me would say things like “wow that’s admirable” and “I wish I could do the same” but then the questions arose: How was I going to survive without an income? How long would I be going for? Did I have a plan set out? The questions were coming from all directions and sometimes from within. I didn’t have answers. All I knew was that something deep in me was telling me I could no longer continue the way I was, so I took the leap. Now I knew at the time my decision was going to be seen as inspired by the acclaimed Eat, Pray, Love phenomenon so I profusely denied any resemblance to author Elizabeth Gilbert’s journey and my own – I didn’t want to be that cliché. I laughed off the idea when my friend gave me the book before I took off but now, nine months later, I’ve accepted the truth that the similarities between Gilbert’s and my journey are in fact very similar. Actually freakishly similar. I too indulged in delicious foods, fell in love with an older Spanish man and now I’m praying in India.

So on November 16th, 2011 with a one-way ticket, I boarded a plane from Toronto to make the long journey to Siem Reap, Cambodia where I would be spending the next 6 weeks teaching English to children at the NGO, Anjali House. I loved the experience and the town so much I extended my stay by 4 weeks. From there I was off backpacking across South East Asia sometimes with a friend, sometimes own my own. Each moment was an adventure where I was experiencing something new everyday. In seven months I had hit seven countries and 15 cities. But there was something missing. What was I hoping to gain by all these experiences I was having? Knowledge about the world perhaps? But seeing yet another temple wasn’t satisfying my hunger to understand why the universe existed and what humans were doing on it. So with my travelers bible in tow, Lonley Planet, and my fingers crossed, I headed to the birthplace of yoga - India.

Without knowing much about ashram life I headed to Aurovalley Ashram about 10 kilometres from the city of Rishikesh and just steps away from the holy river, Ganges. Aurovalley, founded by Swami Brahmdev, is based on the philosophies of Sri Aurobindo and The Mother which encourages the study of integral yoga – the process of letting go of ones ego and uniting all parts of oneself with the Divine conscious. It was exactly what I was looking for. I needed to learn how to quiet my mind and find out who I really was beyond the negative thoughts and habits that I knew were holding me back from everything I had dreamed of. I needed to know the source of my depression. It’s been three and half months and I’m still here. No I’m not scrubbing floors like Julia Roberts in the movie Eat, Pray, Love but I am meditating everyday for at least 2 hours, doing yoga asanas, teaching the school children who come to the ashram from the surrounding village and more importantly, discovering who I really am.

On my first day at the ashram I saw a quote that angered me: “It is the ego that gets depressed. Do not mind it. Go on quietly with your work and the depression will disappear." Now being someone who has suffered depression for over 10 years, I didn’t agree. But months of silent meditation and I finally understand it. I’ve realized that I am more than my thoughts. It’s the mind that gets taken over by depression but if I’m more than just a mind than I am also more than my depression. The depression doesn’t penetrate the truest part of me, my soul.

I’m now off Celexa and I know this time it’s permanent. Managing my depression no longer means trips to a psychiatrist and taking anti-depressants, it’s letting go of my ego – the part of me that thinks it is the sole controller of my life and it alone is in charge of the outcome of my actions. I have faith in something much greater than myself, much greater than the human mind. Now I’m definitely not endorsing weaning yourself off anti-depressants without medical approval or saying that pills don’t work because they did for me, for many years, but I no longer believe that they are a permanent solution. For the first time I feel like I’m in charge of my life and a deeper part of me is in control of my thoughts. Depression is no longer a dark force lurking around the corner.

Some would argue that it’s not necessary to go half way across the world to ‘find yourself’ but for me it was. I needed the assurance that when I was frustrated at not being able to get my chattering mind to quiet, I would find guidance in someone who had already gone through the process. In one months time, it will be a year since I left home and I have now accepted the fact that my self-discovering journey will probably always be seen as inspired by Eat, Pray, Love but if being that cliché means I’m more myself than ever before, I wear that label proudly.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

RECENT PICS OF THE ASHRAM

The World Temple under construction with view of the 'OM' room in the distance
Current meditation hall

One of my favourite signs

A beautiful rainbow