Writing & Poetry
More stories from Sri Chinmoy's students.
Failures are the pillars of success
Anugata Bach New York, United States
Sri Chinmoy's opening meditation at the Parliament of World Religions
Pradhan Balter Chicago, United States
My Room
Preetidutta Thorpe Auckland, New Zealand
Spirituality means speed
Patanga Cordeiro São Paulo, Brazil
'It was like I was seeing who Guru really was: this extraordinary, beautiful being inside a physical body'
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
I felt a bell ringing in my heart
Charana Evans Cardiff, Wales
A Divine Phone Call
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
The most beautiful and fulfilling of all possible experiences
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
The Peace Run visits Oxford
Tejvan Pettinger Oxford, United Kingdom
Regaining My Inner Joy
Sujata Muto Kyoto, Japan
I just knew from the moment I saw him
Ashrita Furman New York, United States
Learning to follow my intuition
Saranyu Pearson Geelong, AustraliaSuggested videos
interviews with Sri Chinmoy's students
Experiences of meditation
Preetidutta Thorpe Auckland, New Zealand
Getting through difficult times in your meditation
Banshidhar Medeiros San Juan, Puerto Rico
Where the finite connects to the Infinite
Jogyata Dallas Auckland, New Zealand
My first experience with Sri Chinmoy
Nayak Polissar Seattle, United StatesWhen I met Sri Chinmoy for the first time
Baridhi Yonchev Sofia, Bulgaria
Growing up on Sri Chinmoy's path
Aruna Pohland Augsburg, Germany
So here you are half a planet away from your home, sitting on a slab of stone in the warm afternoon sun with these epiphanies rolling about inside your head. My brown cap shades my eyes. A good place to meditate, obey the grey stone and watch the mind. I recall an image from long ago, the mind likened to a buffalo that wants to eat the rice plants (sense objects that give immediate pleasure but subequent pain), the one who knows and watches as the owner of the buffalo. The buffalo is allowed to roam free, but you watch over the buffalo and shout when it comes too close to the rice plants – if it is stubborn and will not obey you, you hit it and send it away with your stick. "He who watches over his mind will escape the snares of Mara."