Thursday, October 24, 2013

EATING WITH YOUR HANDS VEDIC SCIENCE

Eating food with the hands in today’s Western society can sometimes be perceived as being unhygienic, bad mannered and primitive. However within Indian culture there is an old saying that,
” eating food with your hands feeds not only the body but also the mind and the spirit”.
In the Big Brother series some years back, an English participant complained about a indian participants use of her hands during food preparations and her eating habits, “They eat with their hands in India, don’t they? Or is that China? You don’t know where those hands have been.”  Within many Indian households nowadays, the practice of eating food with the hands has been replaced with the use of cutlery.
Have you ever thought of why previous generations in India ate with the hands? There is a reason for their this.  The practice of eating with the hands originated within Ayurvedic teachings. The Vedic people knew the power held in the hand.
The ancient native tradition of eating food with the hands is derived from the mudra practice, which is prevalent in many aspects within Hinduism. Mudras are used during mediation and are very prominent within the many classical forms of dance, such as Bharatnatyam.
The hands are considered the most precious organ of action. This is linked to the Vedic prayer of
“Karagre vasate Laksmih karamule Sarasvati Karamadhye tu Govindah prabhate karadarsanam”
(On the tip of your fingers is Goddess Lakshmi, on the base of your fingers is Goddess Saraswati; in the middle of your fingers is Lord Govinda), which we recite whilst looking at our palms. Thus, this shloka suggests that all the divinity lies in human effort.
Our hands and feet are said to be the conduits of the five elements. The Ayurvedic texts teach that each finger is an extension of one of the five elements. Through the thumb comes space; through the forefinger, air; through the mid-finger, fire; through the ring finger, water and through the little finger it is earth.


Each finger
 aids in the transformation of food, before it passes on to internal digestion. Gathering the fingertips as they touch the food stimulates the five elements and invites Agni to bring forth the digestive juices. As well as improving digestion the person becomes more conscious of the tastes, textures and smells of the foods they are eating, which all adds to the pleasure of eating.



You may
 have noticed that elders in the family hardly ever use utensils to measure all the different type of masala, and would instead prefer to use their hands to measure the quantity instead. As each handful is tailored to provide a suitable amount for the own body. Overall there are 6 main documented forms that the hands take when obtaining a measurement a certain type of food ranging from solid food to seeds, and flour.
This is a prime example of how many things within Hindu culture may seem weird and unusual at first glance, but once a closer look is taken it is surprising, but a vast amount of knowledge is revealed.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

WHERE DO YOU GET YOUR PROTEIN?

5 Plant-based Athletes That Blow The Protein Myth Out of the Water
Unfortunately, most people are still under the illusion that you need animal protein if you want to be strong and healthy.
Thankfully, despite the obvious opposition the following 5 athletes are on a mission to bust the protein myth wide open and show the world that you can in fact be at the top of your game, while being fueled by plants.
I’m pretty sure that nobody is asking these guys where they get their protein…

WHAT IS THE BEST RELIGION? BY A.C. BHAKTIVEDANTA SWAMI PRABHUPADA



What is the best Religion?

By A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
(Quoted from Prabhupada Room Conversation San Francisco, April 1, 1969)
What is the best religion? This question was once put to Sri Chaitanya Mahaprabhu, and He said: that religion is the best which teaches his followers to develop pure love of God.
Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu saidprema pum-artho mahan: "Love of Godhead is the ultimate benediction for all human beings."
The Test Of Religion: How Much You Have Developed Love of God.
That is the best form of religion which performing one becomes elevated to  devotional service of the Lord. Not religious formalities. One has to test by the resultPhalena pariciyate.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

ISLAM AND VAISHNAVISM BY A.C. BHAKTIVEDANTA SWAMI PRABHUPADA


A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
on
Islam and Vaishnavism




"Certainly God will send to my sect at the end of every hundred years,
a person who will renew my religion."

Prophet Muhammad
"Chaitanya Mahaprabhu proved devotional Service from the Qur'an.
So it requires a devotee who can explain God from any godly literature."

Srila Prabhupada

Dedicated to an Eternal Spiritual Master
who can save the entire universe
Contents
1. Islam is also Vaishnavism
2. Islam means Submission
3. God sends His messengers
4. Parampara — Disciplic succession
5. The Qur'an
6. The Qur'an is also shastra
7. The knowledge must be scientific
8. The Muslim religion is based on a conception of God
9. The Muslim religion is also bhakti-yoga
10. Guru — Spiritual master
11. Hazrat Muhammad is shaktyavesha-avatara
12. Hazrat Muhammad is an acharya
13. Hazrat Muhammad is an authority
14. Hazrat Muhammad is a devotee of God
15. Hazrat Muhammad is a servant of God
16. Hazrat Muhammad is the perfect holy man
17. Hazrat Muhammad preached God-consciousness
18. Hazrat Muhammad teaches according to the class of men
19. Hazrat Muhammad could hear God
20. The Muslims are also Vaishnavas
21. A planet where pious Muslims go
22. Animal slaughter
23. God is a person
24. God is not formless
25. God can be seen
26. God is not material
27. Allah is a name of God
28. The ultimate goal is to love God

Drutakarma Das Working on New Book About Extreme Human Antiquity

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