4/24/09

Dwapara Yuga: Living comfortably within one's means

Pew Research published a new report this week showing that the public is re-drawing the lines of what are considered necessities and what are considered luxuries compared to past reports on the same theme.

As the economy grew, more and more previously considered 'luxury' items came to be considered 'necessities', from A/C, to dish washers, to microwaves. In this latest report, the trend has been reversed, in line with the global downturn.

There is some evidence in the latest report of two trends in communications products:
- Growing importance relative to more industrial age appliances
- With digitalization, a move away from classic land lines and televisions to cellphones and computers

Sri Yukteswar and Yogananda emphasized the importance of living simply within one's means, well illustrated by a passage in Swami Kriyananda's "The Path":

Even for worldly people, simple living is an important key to happiness. Across the road from Master's retreat at Twenty-Nine Palms there lived a man in a small one-room cabin, alone. He had no garden, and, indoors, few modern conveniences. Yet his happiness was transparent. He was burdened with no debts. There were no unnecessary chores to pilfer away his precious hours of freedom. Again and again he proudly played a recording of a popular song, expressive of his perfect contentment with life: "I've Got My Home in Twenty-Nine Palms."

Master, gazing over toward this man's place one day, remarked, "He is like a king in his palace! Such is the joy of simple living."

In his later years, it was to the dessert quiet and simplicity of Twenty Nine Palms that Yogananda retreated from SRF's sumptuous public buildings of Encinitas, Mount Washington and the various temples of all religions in the LA area. In earlier years, Yogananda had escaped to the then calm of a simple private cottage in Manhattan Beach.

4/22/09

Dwapara Yuga: World Digital Library

This week saw the launch of the World Digital Library in Paris.

It is the third such Internet library initiative after Google's Book Search and the European Union's Europeana.

The site was developed by a team from the Library of Congress in Washington with assistance from the new Library of Alexandria (founded 2003) in Egypt, beginning with some 1,200 documents from 19 countries and funding from Google and Microsoft.

The Egyptian aspect is significant since it echoes efforts to regroup knowledge in the increasing chaos of descending Kali Yuga in the original Library of Alexandria.

Limiting knowledge to ruling elites and public disinformation are characteristic of Kali Yuga during the pit of which the original Library of Alexandria was destroyed.

In a separate move, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in the US has expanded its online programming substantially this week including the NOVA series which 'explores innovations and discoveries from our past, present and future demystifying the science and technology along the way, while highlighting the human side of the people "who make science happen."'

4/14/09

Dwapara Yuga: God's businessman

R.G. LeTourneau, the famous Christian industrialist, went from shoveling sand as an apprentice after dropping out of school to being the supplier of 70% of the earth moving equipment in WWII, a multi millionaire with over 300 patents to his name, the force behind civil engineering projects from dams to highways to oil rigs.

He never backed down from any monumental task, breaking down barriers of water, marshes or mountains. When faced with a problem that seemed at first to be unsolvable, or to some even impossible, he simply prayed about it, studied it and worked at it until a solution was found. His attitude was one of being partnered, as he put it, with God.

As he progressed in his work, he donated 90% of his income to charity, founding LeTourneau University in Texas, with missions in both Peru and Liberia, leveraging planes to meet his business and church appointments but never developing a jet-set lifestyle.

His combination of business acumen and spiritual values makes him a Dwapara Yuga figure, neither impractical monk always ready with a begging bowl, nor callous businessman exploiting all around him, but a new combination of the best of each, very much in line with James Lynn, Oliver Black, Dr Lewis, Bhagabati Charan Ghosh, Lahiri Mahasaya  and Sri Yukteswar.

4/11/09

Dwapara Yuga Space Conquering Machines


A theme of Dwapara Yuga is the breaking down of barriers of space:

1775 First military sub - David Bushnell
1884 First skyscraper - William Le Baron Jenney
1903 Heavier than air flight - Wright Brothers
1942 V2 Rocket - Werner von Braun
1943 Scuba- Jacques-Yves Cousteau
1943 Maunsell Sea Forts - Guy Maunsell

The Maunsell sea forts gave rise to today's oil rigs and perhaps in line with their Dwapara Yuga significance gave rise to pirate radios, rivaling government controlled airwaves in Europe, and one of the first modern micronations, Sealand, mocking the authorities of larger nations with its pomp of flag, passports and currency.

Surprisingly, very little has publicly spun off from the Gulf Wars I and II, although long term it may be perceived as the IT war with so much computer controlled gadgetry being brought into play to lower casualties. Hopefully we wont be building Skynet ;)




Translation

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People who think expansively are more likely to succeed in every way, even materially. Truly successful people are naturally sensitive to the subtle tremors of opportunity in the great web of life.