2 disciples of gautama

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2 Disciples of Gautama A Case-study for students of meditation

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

What may we learn from these 2 disciples of

Gautama for our meditation?

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 picked Gautama’s hand

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 was handpicked by Gautama

1 is known for his boundless joy

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 is known for his sorrow

1 mostly walked the road

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 lived long with Gautama

1 was feared all his life

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 was loved by all

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Both are said to have attained Nirvana…

1 before him, so said Gautama

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

1 after Gautama

1 ferocious bandit, Angulimala

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1 was ever polite, Ananda

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

What type are we?

Or somewhere in between the two?

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Angulimala the ferocious wished to kill a 1000th time.

He saw a monk.

This shall be an easy kill. He thought.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

He ran, yet he could not catch his hunt.

He tried again…

Yet his powerful hands fell short.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘Stop monk stop!’ He finally cried.

‘It’s you who’s running,’ said the monk, ‘I stopped long ago.’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Those words and the bandit fell in Gautama’s feet.

In that moment the killer who wore his victim’s fingers around his neck died.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

A new entity was born out of him.

Yet meditation didn’t come to him.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

His past as a killer would haunt him every time he closed his eyes.

Master told him to not give up. And he did not.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Then one day someone said, ‘you look as divine as your teacher.’

That day Master asked him to be a wandering monk.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘Go out and see the world anew,’ the Master said.

So now he walked the roads.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Many years passed. No one heard of his past.

But then one day, someone made out.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘Hey that’s Angulimala, the bandit. He is back, disguised as a monk!’

‘Kill him before he kills us!’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

The sound went like a roar.

In the rain of stones, the monk was beaten and bruised.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Somehow he crawled and reached his Master.

Covered in blood, yet locked in boundless joy.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Master asked, ‘are you angry with them?’

‘No,’ said the man, ‘like how I was once, even they didn’t know what they were doing.’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Saying this and smiling, he passed away as a free man in the lap of the Master.

Thereafter Gautama told all to be as free as Angulimala.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

That day Ananda was in deep sorrow.

It was the day after Gautama left the world.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Folks thought Ananda was sad because the Master was gone.

‘Don’t mourn the departure of Gautama,’ they all said to him.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘He left for where we all must go.’

Ananda heard them and replied, ‘I am not sad for Gautama.

Brothers my sorrow is for myself.’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘Look at my fate.

‘I am the one who lived the most with Gautama.

‘I am the one who heard all his sermons.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘I am the one who he talked to in private.

‘I am the one who kept it all in my memory.

‘I am the one who shall recite it now to everyone.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘And look at my fate.

‘In this time Master became a Buddha and is now gone…

‘While I am still the same old Ananda.’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

‘No change to me could come.’

Ananda thereafter locked himself in a room. For seven days he didn’t come out

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

On the eighth day when he emerged,People were left aghast.

It looked master had returned in form of Ananda.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

But Ananda cleared all the air in a moment

‘I am your old Ananda,’ he said, ‘and now I tell you what Master left with me for all.’

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

These 2 disciples of Gautama…

One a bandit who killed indiscriminately…

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Other a noble soul who spoke not a harsh word;

They represent two extremes of human nature.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

We are perhaps somewhere in between.

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

The point is meditation can come to all.

However, not by itself!

We must put a conscious effort.

No matter who or what we be: Siddhartha, Ananda or Angulimala!

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Further, for the one who has put in the effort,

Success is assured: Says the Master!

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

This much for the basics & if the interest is to know more… check this:

Little Soldier in the big war of life

Story of a Meditation Technology

PREVIEW & BUY(Click here)

© Puneet Srivastava, April 2015

Gratitude:

To my revered teacher Swami Amartyananda

and the message of SDM:

Satsang Disciplined Life

Meditation.

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