राम
All Satsangs

Bliss Too Will Pass - 10th October 2016

October 10, 20162:4535 views

Saar (Essence)

Ananta emphasizes that while both bliss and grief are passing waves of experience, one should remain grounded in the unchanging witness that observes these fluctuations.

Drown in love; when you are with the Divine, nothing else matters.
Bliss comes and grief comes, but both shall pass.
What is it that will not pass? That which sees this.

devotional

blissgriefimpermanencewitnessingconditioningemotional wavesadvaita vedanta

Transcript

This transcript is auto-generated and may contain errors.

Seeker

There is fantastic joy. Joy is there. What else? Bliss, joy, abundance, goal. That's why we call him Gopala, my little trickster. I just don't want to know, I just want my being with you. Spoil-type thing, too much of spoon-feeding, yeah. Butter feeding, butter feeding. You're good. So much love, so much love. Just all the things don't matter, just drown in love. That's enough, don't you think so?

Ananta

This too shall pass. This too shall pass. I have to give him the bad news. Yeah, yeah, it's okay. Let it come, you see. Something happens, somebody tells you something, then tears. 'Jesus, why? Why like this? I'm so caught up in my conditioning.' Whose voice is that one, you see?

Ananta

So these are the ups and downs of the wave. Sometimes so much bliss, bliss, bliss. Sometimes so much grief, grief, grief. And when bliss comes, it feels like, 'Oh, this will not go, this will be like this,' you see. And we feel like that. And when grief comes, we feel sad because we feel like, 'Oh, this might never go, I'm feeling so much sadness.' But in both cases, this too shall pass. What is it that will not pass? That which sees this. That which sees, yeah, you.

The Thread Continues

These satsangs touch the same silence.