View allAll Photos Tagged TRANSCENDENTALISM

Andai nei boschi

perché volevo vivere

con saggezza e profondità

e succhiare tutto il midollo della vita,

sbaragliare tutto ciò che non era vita

E non scoprire,

in punto di morte,

che non ero vissuto.

 

(Henry David Thoreau, da Walden ovvero La vita nei boschi)

 

............................

 

I went to the woods...

 

I went to the woods

because I wanted to live deep

and suck out all the marrow of life,

to rout all that was not life

and not, when I came to die,

discover that I had not lived.

 

(Henry David Thoreau, from Walden)

May 12, 2019 - Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple located at 875 Lake Street, Oak Park, Illinois. "Commissioned by the congregation of Oak Park Unity Church in 1905, Wright’s Unity Temple is the greatest public building of the architect’s Chicago years. Wright’s family on his mother’s side were Welsh Unitarians, and his uncle Jenkin Lloyd Jones was a distinguished Unitarian preacher with a parish on Chicago’s south side where Wright and his wife Catherine were married. Wright identified with the rational humanism of Unitarianism, particularly as influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson’s transcendentalism, uniting all beings as one with the divine presence.

 

Wright’s father had been a Universalist preacher. With their emphasis on a loving God, Universalists were early advocates of abolitionism and were the first church to ordain women. In 1886 Universalist Augusta Chapin became minister of the Oak Park Unity Church, attracting new members to the congregation including Frank Lloyd Wright’s mother Anna. Unitarian Universalist minister Rodney Johonnot succeeded Chapin when she joined the Parliament of World Religions in 1893. A lawyer and graduate of Harvard Divinity School, Johonnot was known for his liberal views, even more extreme than those of Jenkin Lloyd Jones with whom he sometimes took issue.

 

When Unity Church burned to the ground in June 1905, Wright was awarded the commission, and in 1906 Johonnot published a booklet titled, A New Edifice for Unity Church. He wanted a modern building that would embody the principles of “unity, truth, beauty, simplicity, freedom and reason.”

 

Wright was a perfect match to these requirements. The design he submitted to the congregation broke with almost every existing convention for traditional Western ecclesiastic architecture. On the novel choice of construction material Wright states, “There was only one material to choose—as church funds were $45,000. Concrete was cheap.” Wright’s bold concept for the building enabled a series of concrete forms to be repeated multiple times.

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings."

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings.”

 

Approached from Lake Street, Unity Temple is a massive and monolithic cube of concrete, sheltered beneath an expansive flat roof. The introspective nature of the building is in part a response to its corner site situated along a busy thoroughfare. No entrance is apparent and the building appears impenetrable, save for a band of high clerestory windows recessed behind decorative piers and shadowed by overhanging eaves.

 

Entry to the building is via a low hall that connects Unity Temple and Unity House. Above the bank of doors leading into the hall, an inscription in bronze declares, “For the worship of God and the service of man.” The low, dimly lit hall that unites the buildings is a transitional space. To the south it opens directly onto Unity House. Designed for “the service of man,” this secular space includes a central meeting hall, flanking balconies for use as open classrooms, and other special purpose rooms for daily operation. Like Wright’s residential architecture, this congregational parish house is centered on a fireplace hearth.

 

Situated across the hall from Unity House is the temple. In contrast to the open entrance into Unity House, access to the sanctuary is complex. Wright masterfully manipulates the sequence of entrance; guiding the visitor through low dark passages he termed “cloisters,” before they ascend into the open, brightly lit sanctuary.

 

The sanctuary is the heart and anchor of the building. At once grand yet intimate, the sanctuary is a masterful composition in light and space. Its elegant articulation and warm colors stand in bold contrast to the grey concrete exterior. Devoid of overt religious iconography, its precise geometric proportions declare a harmonious whole.

The uppermost portion of the sanctuary appears light and transparent. A continuous band of clerestory windows of Wright’s signature leaded glass encircle the flat, coffered ceiling. Set in a concrete grid are twenty-five square skylights of amber tinted leaded glass The effect, Wright states, was intended “to get a sense of a happy cloudless day into the room… daylight sifting through between the intersecting concrete beams, filtering through amber glass ceiling lights. Thus managed, the light would, rain or shine, have the warmth of sunlight.”

 

While Wright’s innovative use of concrete was chosen for its economy, the completed building ultimately cost nearly twice the contracted price due to complications encountered during construction. In September of 1909, the new building was dedicated. Because its unique design bore little resemblance to the other churches along Lake Street, it was decided to rename it Unity Temple.

 

The congregation’s board of trustees issued a statement thanking Wright. “We extend to the architect, Mr. Frank Lloyd Wright, our most hearty congratulations upon the wonderful achievement embodied in the new edifice and further extend to him our most sincere thanks for the great service which, through the building, he has rendered to the parish and to the community. We believe the building will long endure as a monument to his artistic genius and that, so long as it endures, it will stand forth as a masterpiece of art and architecture.” Their words were prophetic."

 

Previous text from the following website: flwright.org/researchexplore/unitytemple

Ralph Waldo Emerson.

 

Ralph Waldo Emerson (May 25, 1803 – April 27, 1882) was an American essayist, lecturer, and poet who led the Transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century. He was seen as a champion of individualism and a prescient critic of the countervailing pressures of society, and he disseminated his thoughts through dozens of published essays and more than 1,500 public lectures across the United States.

 

Emerson gradually moved away from the religious and social beliefs of his contemporaries, formulating and expressing the philosophy of Transcendentalism in his 1836 essay, Nature. Following this ground-breaking work, he gave a speech entitled "The American Scholar" in 1837, which Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. considered to be America's "Intellectual Declaration of Independence".[1]

 

Emerson wrote most of his important essays as lectures first, then revised them for print. His first two collections of essays – Essays: First Series and Essays: Second Series, published respectively in 1841 and 1844 – represent the core of his thinking, and include such well-known essays as Self-Reliance, The Over-Soul, Circles, The Poet and Experience. Together with Nature, these essays made the decade from the mid-1830s to the mid-1840s Emerson's most fertile period.

 

Emerson wrote on a number of subjects, never espousing fixed philosophical tenets, but developing certain ideas such as individuality, freedom, the ability for humankind to realize almost anything, and the relationship between the soul and the surrounding world. Emerson's "nature" was more philosophical than naturalistic: "Philosophically considered, the universe is composed of Nature and the Soul." Emerson is one of several figures who "took a more pantheist or pandeist approach by rejecting views of God as separate from the world."[2]

 

He remains among the linchpins of the American romantic movement,[3] and his work has greatly influenced the thinkers, writers and poets that have followed him. When asked to sum up his work, he said his central doctrine was "the infinitude of the private man."[4] Emerson is also well known as a mentor and friend of fellow Transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau.[5]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Waldo_Emerson

Sarah Margaret Fuller Ossoli, commonly known as Margaret Fuller, (May 23, 1810 – July 19, 1850) was an American journalist, critic, and women's rights advocate associated with the American transcendentalism movement.

 

She was the first full-time American female book reviewer in journalism. Her book Woman in the Nineteenth Century is considered the first major feminist work in the United States. Her seminal work, Woman in the Nineteenth Century, was published in 1845. A year later, she was sent to Europe for the Tribune as its first female correspondent. She soon became involved with the revolutions in Italy and allied herself with Giuseppe Mazzini. She had a relationship with Giovanni Ossoli, with whom she had a child. All three members of the family died in a shipwreck off Fire Island, New York, as they were traveling to the United States in 1850. Fuller's body was never recovered.

 

Fuller was an advocate of women's rights and, in particular, women's education and the right to employment. She also encouraged many other reforms in society, including prison reform and the emancipation of slaves in the United States. Many other advocates for women's rights and feminism, including Susan B. Anthony, cite Fuller as a source of inspiration.

 

Sarah Margaret Fuller was born May 23, 1810, in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, the first child of Timothy Fuller and Margaret Crane Fuller. She was named after her paternal grandmother and her mother; by the age of nine, however, she dropped "Sarah" and insisted on being called "Margaret". The Margaret Fuller House, in which she was born, is still standing. Her father taught Fuller to read and write at the age of three and a half, shortly after the couple's second daughter, Julia Adelaide, died at the age of fourteen months. He offered her an education as rigorous as any boy's at the time and forbade her from reading the typical feminine fare of the time, such as etiquette books and sentimental novels. He incorporated Latin into his teaching shortly after the birth of the couple's son, Eugene, in May 1815, and soon Margaret was translating simple passages from Virgil. Later in life Margaret blamed her father's exacting love and his valuation of accuracy and precision for her childhood nightmares and sleepwalking. During the day, young Margaret spent time with her mother, who taught her household chores and sewing. In 1817, her brother William Henry Fuller was born, and her father was elected as a representative in the United States Congress. For the next eight years, he would spend four to six months a year in Washington, D.C.

 

Fuller hoped to earn her living through journalism and translation; her first published work, a response to historian George Bancroft, appeared in November 1834 in the North American Review. When she was 23, her father's law practice failed and he moved the family to a farm in Groton. On February 20, 1835, both Frederick Henry Hedge and James Freeman Clarke requested written contributions from her to publish in their respective periodicals. Clarke helped her publish her first literary review in the Western Messenger in June: criticisms of recent biographies on George Crabbe and Hannah More. In the fall of that year, she suffered a terrible migraine with a fever that lasted nine days; Fuller would often be plagued with headaches throughout her life. While she was still recovering, her father died of cholera on October 2, 1835. She was deeply affected by his death: "My father's image follows me constantly", she wrote. She vowed to step in as the head of the family and take care of her newly widowed mother and her younger siblings. Her father had not left a will, and two of her uncles gained control of his property and finances, later assessed at $18,098.15, and forced the family to rely on them for support. Humiliated by the way her uncles were treating the family, Fuller wrote that she regretted being "of the softer sex, and never more than now."

 

In 1836, Fuller was given a job teaching at Bronson Alcott's Temple School in Boston, where she remained for a year. She then accepted an invitation to teach under Hiram Fuller (no relation) at the Greene Street School in Providence, Rhode Island, in April 1837 with the unusually high salary of $1,000 per year. Her family sold the Groton farm and Fuller moved with them to Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts.

 

In October 1839, Ralph Waldo Emerson was seeking an editor for his transcendentalist journal The Dial. After several had declined the role, he offered it to Fuller, referring to her as "my vivacious friend." Emerson had first met Fuller in Cambridge in 1835; of that meeting, he admitted "she made me laugh more than I liked."

 

The next summer, Fuller spent two weeks at Emerson's home in Concord where their friendship grew. Fuller accepted Emerson's offer to edit The Dial on October 20, 1839, though she did not begin work until the first week of 1840. She edited the journal for the first two years of its existence from 1840 to 1842, though her promised annual salary of $200 was never paid. Because of her role, she was soon recognized as one of the most important figures of the transcendental movement and was invited to George Ripley's Brook Farm, a communal experiment. Fuller never officially joined the community but was a frequent visitor, often spending New Year's Eve there.

 

In the summer of 1843, she traveled to Chicago, Milwaukee, Niagara Falls and Buffalo, New York; while there, she interacted with several Native Americans, including members of the Ottawa and the Chippewa tribes. She reported her experiences in a book called Summer on the Lakes, which she completed writing on her 34th birthday in 1844. Fuller had used the library at Harvard College to do research on the Great Lakes region, and became the first woman allowed to use Harvard's library.

 

One of Fuller's most important works, "The Great Lawsuit", was written in serial form for The Dial. She originally intended to name the work The Great Lawsuit: Man 'versus' Men, Woman 'versus' Women; when it was expanded and published independently in 1845, it was instead named Woman in the Nineteenth Century. After completing it, she wrote to a friend: "I had put a good deal of my true self in it, as if, I suppose I went away now, the measure of my footprint would be left on earth."

 

Fuller was an early proponent of feminism and especially believed in providing education to women. Once equal educational rights were afforded women, she believed, women could push for equal political rights as well. She advocated that women seek any employment they wish, rather than catering to the stereotypical "feminine" roles of the time, such as teaching. ] Fuller also warned women to be careful about marriage and not to become dependent on their husbands. By 1832, she had made a personal commitment to stay single.

 

Fuller also advocated reform at all levels of society, including prison. In October 1844, she visited Sing Sing and interviewed the women prisoners, even staying overnight in the facility. Sing Sing was developing a more humane system for its women inmates, many of whom were prostitutes. Fuller was also concerned about the homeless and those living in dire poverty, especially in New York. She also admitted that, though she was raised to believe "that the Indian obstinately refused to be civilized", her travels in the American West made her realize that the white man unfairly treated the Native Americans; she considered Native Americans an important part of American heritage. She also supported the rights of African-Americans, referring to "this cancer of slavery", and suggested that those who were interested in the Abolition movement follow the same reasoning when considering the rights of women. She criticized people like Emerson for focusing too much on individual improvement and not enough on social reform.

 

Fuller left The Dial in 1844 in part because of ill health but also because of her disappointment with the publication's dwindling subscription list. She moved to New York that autumn and joined Horace Greeley's New York Tribune as literary critic, becoming the first full-time book reviewer in journalism and, by 1846, was the publication's first female editor. Fuller was sent to Europe in 1846 by the New York Tribune, specifically England and Italy, as its first female foreign correspondent. She traveled from Boston to Liverpool in August on the Cambria, a vessel that used both sail and steam to make the journey in ten days and sixteen hours. Over the next four years she provided thirty-seven reports from overseas. She interviewed many prominent writers including George Sand and Thomas Carlyle.

 

In the spring of 1846, she met Giuseppe Mazzini in England, who had been in exile from Italy since 1837. Fuller also met the Italian revolutionary Giovanni Angelo Ossoli, a marquis who had been disinherited by his family because of his support for Mazzini. Fuller and Ossoli moved in together in Florence, Italy, likely before they were married, if they ever were. Fuller originally did not support marrying him, in part because of their different religions; she was Protestant and he was Roman Catholic. Biographers have speculated that the couple married on April 4, 1848, to celebrate the anniversary of their first meeting. By the time the couple moved to Florence, they were referred to as husband and wife, though it is unclear if any formal ceremony took place. It seems certain that at the time their child was born, they were not married. By New Year's Day 1848, she suspected that she was pregnant but kept it from Ossoli for several weeks. Their child, Angelo Eugene Philip Ossoli, was born in early September 1848; they nicknamed him Angelino. Fuller finally informed her mother about Ossoli and Angelino in August 1849. The letter explained that she had kept silent so as not to upset her "but it has become necessary, on account of the child, for us to live publicly and permanently together." Her mother's response makes it clear that she was aware that a legal marriage had not taken place. Even so, she was happy for her daughter, writing: "I send my first kiss with my fervent blessing to my grandson."

 

The couple supported Giuseppe Mazzini's revolution for the establishment of a Roman Republic in 1849—Ossoli fought in the struggle while Fuller volunteered at a supporting hospital.

 

After generations of rule by several parties, few of which were Italian, Italy had been left without an official central government with various pieces of the country overseen by different weak governments, including one under the control of the Papacy. When Pope Pius IX was appointed in 1846, he made small steps towards the establishment of a central Italian democratic government, though revolutionaries like Mazzini did not trust the Pope's efforts.[85] The political unrest was enough that the Pope disguised himself and escaped on November 24, 1848. A Roman republic with a representative government was established in February 1849, only to be destroyed by an invasion from France a few months later. Because Fuller and Ossoli were aligned with the revolution, when Pope Pius IX returned to Rome in 1850, they had to flee Italy and decided to move to the United States. She intended to use her experience to write a book about the history of the Roman Republic, a work she may have begun as early as 1847, hoping to find an American publisher after a British one rejected it. She believed the work would be her most important, referring to it in a March 1849 letter to her brother Richard as, "something good which may survive my troubled existence."

 

In 1850, Fuller, Ossoli, and their child began a five-week return voyage to the United States aboard the ship Elizabeth. The ship was an American merchant freighter carrying cargo that included mostly marble from Carrara as well as a statue of John C. Calhoun sculpted by Hiram Powers. After a short delay due to rain, the Elizabeth set sail on May 17. At sea, the ship's captain, Seth Hasty, died of smallpox. The child, Angelino, contracted the disease as well, though he recovered.

 

The ship slammed into a sandbar less than 100 yards from Fire Island, New York, on July 19, 1850, around 3:30 a.m. Many of the other passengers and crew members abandoned ship. The first mate, Mr. Bangs, urged Fuller and Ossoli to try to save themselves and their child as he himself jumped overboard, later claiming he believed Fuller had wanted to be left behind to die. On the beach, people arrived with carts hoping to take advantage if any cargo washed to shore; none made any effort to rescue the crew or passengers of the Elizabeth, though they were only 50 yards from shore. Ossoli and Fuller, along with their child, were some of the last on the ship; most others had attempted to swim to shore. Eventually, Ossoli was thrown overboard by a massive wave and, after the wave had passed, a crewman who witnessed the event said Fuller could not be seen.

 

Henry David Thoreau traveled to New York, at the urging of Emerson, to search the shore but neither Fuller's body nor that of her husband was ever recovered; only Angelino had washed ashore. Few of their possessions were found other than some of the child's clothes and a few letters. Fuller's manuscript on the history of the Roman Republic was also lost. A cenotaph to Fuller and Ossoli, under which Angelino is buried, is in Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

 

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

May 12, 2019 - Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple located at 875 Lake Street, Oak Park, Illinois. "Commissioned by the congregation of Oak Park Unity Church in 1905, Wright’s Unity Temple is the greatest public building of the architect’s Chicago years. Wright’s family on his mother’s side were Welsh Unitarians, and his uncle Jenkin Lloyd Jones was a distinguished Unitarian preacher with a parish on Chicago’s south side where Wright and his wife Catherine were married. Wright identified with the rational humanism of Unitarianism, particularly as influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson’s transcendentalism, uniting all beings as one with the divine presence.

 

Wright’s father had been a Universalist preacher. With their emphasis on a loving God, Universalists were early advocates of abolitionism and were the first church to ordain women. In 1886 Universalist Augusta Chapin became minister of the Oak Park Unity Church, attracting new members to the congregation including Frank Lloyd Wright’s mother Anna. Unitarian Universalist minister Rodney Johonnot succeeded Chapin when she joined the Parliament of World Religions in 1893. A lawyer and graduate of Harvard Divinity School, Johonnot was known for his liberal views, even more extreme than those of Jenkin Lloyd Jones with whom he sometimes took issue.

 

When Unity Church burned to the ground in June 1905, Wright was awarded the commission, and in 1906 Johonnot published a booklet titled, A New Edifice for Unity Church. He wanted a modern building that would embody the principles of “unity, truth, beauty, simplicity, freedom and reason.”

 

Wright was a perfect match to these requirements. The design he submitted to the congregation broke with almost every existing convention for traditional Western ecclesiastic architecture. On the novel choice of construction material Wright states, “There was only one material to choose—as church funds were $45,000. Concrete was cheap.” Wright’s bold concept for the building enabled a series of concrete forms to be repeated multiple times.

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings."

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings.”

 

Approached from Lake Street, Unity Temple is a massive and monolithic cube of concrete, sheltered beneath an expansive flat roof. The introspective nature of the building is in part a response to its corner site situated along a busy thoroughfare. No entrance is apparent and the building appears impenetrable, save for a band of high clerestory windows recessed behind decorative piers and shadowed by overhanging eaves.

 

Entry to the building is via a low hall that connects Unity Temple and Unity House. Above the bank of doors leading into the hall, an inscription in bronze declares, “For the worship of God and the service of man.” The low, dimly lit hall that unites the buildings is a transitional space. To the south it opens directly onto Unity House. Designed for “the service of man,” this secular space includes a central meeting hall, flanking balconies for use as open classrooms, and other special purpose rooms for daily operation. Like Wright’s residential architecture, this congregational parish house is centered on a fireplace hearth.

 

Situated across the hall from Unity House is the temple. In contrast to the open entrance into Unity House, access to the sanctuary is complex. Wright masterfully manipulates the sequence of entrance; guiding the visitor through low dark passages he termed “cloisters,” before they ascend into the open, brightly lit sanctuary.

 

The sanctuary is the heart and anchor of the building. At once grand yet intimate, the sanctuary is a masterful composition in light and space. Its elegant articulation and warm colors stand in bold contrast to the grey concrete exterior. Devoid of overt religious iconography, its precise geometric proportions declare a harmonious whole.

The uppermost portion of the sanctuary appears light and transparent. A continuous band of clerestory windows of Wright’s signature leaded glass encircle the flat, coffered ceiling. Set in a concrete grid are twenty-five square skylights of amber tinted leaded glass The effect, Wright states, was intended “to get a sense of a happy cloudless day into the room… daylight sifting through between the intersecting concrete beams, filtering through amber glass ceiling lights. Thus managed, the light would, rain or shine, have the warmth of sunlight.”

 

While Wright’s innovative use of concrete was chosen for its economy, the completed building ultimately cost nearly twice the contracted price due to complications encountered during construction. In September of 1909, the new building was dedicated. Because its unique design bore little resemblance to the other churches along Lake Street, it was decided to rename it Unity Temple.

 

The congregation’s board of trustees issued a statement thanking Wright. “We extend to the architect, Mr. Frank Lloyd Wright, our most hearty congratulations upon the wonderful achievement embodied in the new edifice and further extend to him our most sincere thanks for the great service which, through the building, he has rendered to the parish and to the community. We believe the building will long endure as a monument to his artistic genius and that, so long as it endures, it will stand forth as a masterpiece of art and architecture.” Their words were prophetic."

 

Previous text from the following website: flwright.org/researchexplore/unitytemple

Elizabeth Blackwell (3 February 1821 – 31 May 1910) was the first woman to receive a medical degree in the United States, as well as the first woman on the UK Medical Register.

 

She was the first openly identified woman to graduate from medical school, a pioneer in promoting the education of women in medicine in the United States, and a social and moral reformer in both the United States and in Britain. Her sister Emily was the third woman in the US to get a medical degree.

 

Elizabeth Blackwell was born in a house on Dicksons Street in Bristol, Gloucestershire, England, to Samuel Blackwell, a sugar refiner and his wife Hannah (Lane) Blackwell.[1] She had two older siblings, Anna and Marian, and would eventually have six younger siblings: Samuel (married Antoinette Brown), Henry (married Lucy Stone), Emily (third woman in the US to get a medical degree), Sarah, John and George. Four maiden aunts, Barbara, Ann, Lucy and Mary, also lived with the Blackwells during Blackwell's childhood.

 

Her childhood at Wilson Street was a happy one. Blackwell especially remembered the positive and loving influence of her father. Samuel Blackwell was somewhat liberal in his attitudes towards, not only child rearing, but also religion and social ideologies. For example, rather than beating his children for bad behavior, Barbara Blackwell recorded their trespasses in a black book. If the offences accumulated, the children might be exiled to the attic during dinner. However, Blackwell's father was by no means lax in the education of his children. Samuel Blackwell was a Congregationalist, and exerted a strong influence over the religious and practical education of his children. He believed that each child should be given the opportunity for unlimited development of his/her talents and gifts. Blackwell had not only a governess, but also private tutors to supplement her intellectual development.

 

In 1830, Bristol became unstable and as riots began to break out. Samuel decided to move his family to America. Elizabeth Blackwell was eleven years old when the Blackwells sailed for New York in the Cosmo in August 1832. Her father set up the Congress Sugar Refinery in New York City after they settled in. Abolitionist leaders including William Lloyd Garrison and Theodore Weld paid visits to the Blackwell residence. Blackwell and the rest of the children adopted their father's liberal views and, rather ironically, voluntarily gave up sugar in protest of the slave trade. This was perhaps Blackwell's first taste of social reform. She would grow to love it – attending antislavery fairs and abolitionist meetings throughout the mid to late 1830s.

 

In 1836, the refinery was burned down in a fire. Despite being rebuilt, Samuel Blackwell's refinery ran into business problems only a year later. The family economised, dismissed their servants, and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio in 1838 in an attempt to re-establish the business.

 

Part of the reason for the move to Cincinnati was Samuel Blackwell's interest in cultivating sugar beets, an alternative to the slave-labour-intensive sugar cane being produced elsewhere.

 

Three weeks after their move to Cincinnati, however, on 7 August 1838, Blackwell's father died unexpectedly from biliary fever. He left behind a widow, nine children and a great deal of debt.

 

The Blackwells' financial situation was unfortunate. Pressed by financial need, the sisters Anna, Marian and Elizabeth started a school, The Cincinnati English and French Academy for Young Ladies, which provided instruction in most if not all subjects, and charged for tuition, room and board.

 

Blackwell's abolition work took a back seat during these years, most likely due to the more conservative pro-slavery attitudes in Cincinnati. Blackwell converted to Episcopalianism, probably due to her sister Anna's influence, in December 1838, becoming an active member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church. However, William Henry Channing's arrival in 1839 to Cincinnati changed her mind. Channing, a charismatic Unitarian minister, introduced the ideas of transcendentalism to Blackwell, who started attending the Unitarian Church. A conservative backlash from the Cincinnati community ensued, and as a result, the Academy lost many pupils and was abandoned in 1842. Blackwell began teaching private pupils. Channing's arrival renewed Blackwell's interests in education and reform. She worked at intellectual self-improvement: studying art, attending various lectures, writing short stories and attending various religious services in all denominations (Quaker, Millerite, Jewish). In the early 1840s, she began to articulate thoughts about women's rights in her diaries and letters, and participated in the Harrison political campaign of 1840.

 

In 1844, with the help of her sister Anna, Blackwell procured a teaching job that paid $400 per year in Henderson, Kentucky. Although she was pleased with her class, she found the accommodations and schoolhouse lacking. What disturbed her most was that this was her first real encounter with the realities of slavery. She ultimately found Henderson to be absurd and boring, the people to be simple and petty, and the whole situation, all in all intolerable. She returned to Cincinnati only half a year later, resolved to find a more stimulating means of spending her life.

 

The idea to pursue medicine was first planted in Blackwell's head by a friend in Cincinnati who was dying of a painful disease (possibly uterine cancer). This friend expressed the opinion that a female physician would have made her treatment much more comfortable. Blackwell also felt that women would be better doctors because of their motherly instincts. At first, Blackwell was repulsed by the idea of a medical career. At the time, she "hated everything connected with the body, and could not bear the sight of a medical book". Another influence on her decision to pursue medicine was the connotation of "female physician" at the time. Abortionists were known as "female physicians", a name Blackwell found degrading to what a female physician could potentially achieve.

 

Part of Blackwell's decision to become a doctor was due to the fact that she yearned to live an unattached life, independent of a man and the chains of matrimony.

 

In October 1847, Blackwell was accepted as a medical student by Hobart College, then called Geneva Medical College, located in upstate New York. Her acceptance was a near-accident. The dean and faculty, usually responsible for evaluating an applicant for matriculation, were not able to make a decision due to the special nature of Blackwell's case. They put the issue up to vote by the 150 male students of the class with the stipulation that if one student objected, Blackwell would be turned away. The young men thought this request was so ludicrous that they believed it to be a joke, and responding accordingly, voted unanimously to accept her.

 

On 23 January 1849, Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to achieve a medical degree in the United States. The local press reported her graduation favourably, and when the dean, Dr. Charles Lee, conferred her degree, he stood up and bowed to her.

 

In April 1849, Blackwell made the decision to continue her studies in Europe. She visited a few hospitals in Britain and then headed to Paris. Just like in America, she was rejected from many hospitals due to her gender. In June, Blackwell enrolled at La Maternité; a "lying-in" hospital, under the condition that she would be treated as a student midwife, not a physician. She made the acquaintance of Hippolyte Blot, a young resident physician at La Maternité. She gained much medical experience through his mentorship and training. By the end of the year, Paul Dubois, the foremost obstetrician in his day, had voiced his opinion that she would make the best obstetrician in the United States, male or female.

 

Back in New York City, Blackwell opened up her own practice. She was faced with adversity, but did manage to get some media support from entities such as the New-York Tribune. She had very few patients, a fact Blackwell attributed to the stigma of woman doctors as abortionists. In 1852, she began delivering lectures and published The Laws of Life with Special Reference to the Physical Education of Girls, her first work, a volume about the physical and mental development of girls. Although Elizabeth herself pursued a career and never married or carried a child, this treatise ironically concerned itself with the preparation of young women for motherhood.

 

When the American Civil War broke out, the Blackwell sisters aided in nursing efforts. Blackwell sympathized heavily with the North due to her abolitionist roots, and even went so far as to say she would have left the country if the North had compromised on the subject of slavery. However, Blackwell did meet with some resistance on the part of the male-dominated United States Sanitary Commission. The male physicians refused to help with the nurse education plan if it involved the Blackwells. Still, the New York Infirmary managed to work with Dorothea Dix to train nurses for the Union effort.

 

After leaving for Britain in 1869, Blackwell diversified her interests, and was active both in social reform and authorship. She co-founded the National Health Society in 1871. She perceived herself as a wealthy gentlewoman who had the leisure to dabble in reform and in intellectual activities – the income from her American investments supported her.

 

Elizabeth Blackwell never married. None of the five Blackwell sisters did. Elizabeth thought courtship games were rather silly early in her life, and prized her independence. When commenting on the young men trying to court her during her time in Kentucky, she said: "...do not imagine I am going to make myself a whole just at present; the fact is I cannot find my other half here, but only about a sixth, which would not do."

 

In the Swiss Alps near the Italian border is a small valley town called Lostallo. For the 5th summer in a row Shankra festival made this place its home for a goa-psytrance festival.

 

Video from 2017 youtu.be/sGJAhJp605k

  

Downloads on Flickr are free for fiends & followers but do tell the people where you got the picture.

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

The professor stabbed his chest with his hands curled like forks

before coughing up the question

that had dogged him since he first read Emerson:

Why am I “I”? Like musk oxen we hunkered

while his lecture drifted against us like snow.

If we could, we would have turned our backs into the wind.

 

I felt bad about his class’s being such a snoozefest, though peaceful too,

a quiet little interlude from everyone outside

rooting up the corpse of literature

for being too Caucasian. There was a simple answer

to my own question (how come no one loved me,

stomping on the pedals of my little bicycle):

 

I was insufferable. So, too, was Emerson I bet,

though I liked If the red slayer think he slays—

the professor drew a giant eyeball to depict the Over-soul.

Then he read a chapter from his own book:

naptime.

He didn’t care if our heads tipped forward on their stalks.

 

When spring came, he even threw us a picnic in his yard

where dogwood bloomed despire a few last

dirty bergs of snow. He was a wounded animal

being chased across the tundra by those wolves,

the postmodernists. At any moment

you expected to see blood come dripping through his clothes.

 

And I am I who never understood his question,

though he let me climb to take a seat

aboard the wooden scow he’d been building in the shade

of thirty-odd years. How I ever rowed it

from his yard, into my life—remains a mystery.

The work is hard because the eyeball’s heavy, riding in the bow.

 

Lucia Perillo, “Transcendentalism” from Inseminating the Elephant. Copyright © 2009 by Lucia Perillo. Reprinted by permission of Copper Canyon Press.

 

Source: Inseminating the Elephant (Copper Canyon Press, 2009)

 

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

This was taken a long long time ago, on a freezing winter day when I should have really stayed inside.

 

Life is extremely busy but in a few days I'll be back in Holland and as always everything becomes a lot more laid back - all the stress gets left behind on those poor little clouds whilst I fly across the pond.

 

But before I can allow myself to even think about the ritual Starbucks Skinny Lemon and Poppy Seed Muffin (it deserves capitals trust me) at Bristol Airport, I have to get my teeth into and completely devour Transcendentalism, Thoreau, Dickinson and the tensions between the individual and society in their writing. Gulp. I'm just really freaking out about it because I've come to love Thoreau and I nod my head to every word he writes but I know I don't fully understand him. At times I think the best things are impossible to understand, at least not immediately. Perhaps when I'm 80 I'll nudge Alex in our rocking chairs and let him know that I've finally grasped the importance of a bug living within someone's table. But before I reach this old-age state where I hope the world starts to make sense, I'm going to have to drag myself away from the world wide web and start writing this essay.

 

Wish me luck

  

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

35mm. Film

tran·scen·den·tal·ism (n.):

A philosophy based upon the doctrine that the principles of reality are to be discovered by the study of the processes of thought, or a philosophy emphasizing the intuitive and spiritual above the empirical.

 

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

Seen while walking in the Pioneer Square area of Seattle. I liked the quote and the reflections. This was hanging in the window of Wessel and Lieberman Bookstore (well worth a stop). It's at 208 1st Ave S, near the former location of David Ishii's fine bookstore. The artist for this beautiful calligraphy is Jocelyn Curry . Thanks to seepatrol for an update.

 

"Books are the treasured wealth of the world and the fit inheritance of generations and nations. Books, the oldest and the best, stand naturally and rightfully on the shelves of every cottage. They have no cause of their own to plead, but while they enlighten and sustain the reader his common sense will not refuse them. Their authors are a natural and irresistible aristocracy in every society, and, more than kings or emperors, exert an influence on mankind. "

  

Henry David Thoreau - Walden Chapter III Reading

   

i121006 231

Quotes About Krishna

 

Quotes tagged as "krishna" (showing 1-30 of 39)

Christopher Pike

“It doesn't matter. You are what you are. I am what I am. We are the same-when you take the time to remember me.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna, red-dice 61 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“Can't you ever be serious?' I said, mortified.

'It's difficult,' he said. 'There's so little in life that's worth it.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: divakaruni, krishna, life, palace-of-illusions, panchaali, seriousness 54 likes Like

Christopher Pike

“The truth is always simpler than you can imagine.”

― Christopher Pike, The Red Dice

tags: krishna 47 likes Like

“The only way you can conquer me is through love and there I am gladly conquered”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: krishna, love, mohit-k-misra, moht-misra 38 likes Like

“One who sees inaction in action and action in inaction- he is a wise man.”

― Gopi Krishna

tags: holy-bhagwat-gita, krishna, mohit-k-misra 16 likes Like

“It is I who remain seated in the heart of all creatures as the inner controller of all; and it is I who am the source of memory, knowledge and the ratiocinativefaculty. Again, I am the only object worth knowing through the Vedas; I alone am the origin of Vedānta and the knower of the Vedas too. — Krishna; Chapter 15, verse 15”

― Anonymous, The Bhagavad Gita

tags: hinduism, krishna 11 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Christ attained the ultimate spiritual oneness through prayer and devotion, Moses and Mohammed through prayer, Buddha and all the Indian sages through intense meditation and so did I. And so can you.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 3 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Just like love becomes consummated upon the attainment of orgasm, all the faith and divinity in the world reach their ultimate existential potential upon the attainment of Absolute Unitary Qualia or simply Absolute Godliness.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Alan W. Watts

“When it comes down to it, government is simply an abandonment of responsibility on the assumption that there are people, other than ourselves, who really know how to manage things. But the government, run ostensibly for the good of the people, becomes a self-serving corporation. To keep things under control, it proliferates law of ever-increasing complexity and unintelligibility, and hinders productive work by demanding so much accounting on paper that the record of what has been done becomes more important than what has actually been done. [...] The Taoist moral is that people who mistrust themselves and one another are doomed.”

― Alan W. Watts

tags: democracy, esotericism, government, krishna, philosophy, politics, tao, zen 2 likes Like

“Gujarat is my home state, welcome to the land of Krishna, Gandhi, Sardar & now it's Narendrabhai”

― Mukesh Ambani Vibrant Gujarat 2015

tags: gandhi, gujarat, krishna, narendra-modi, sardar 2 likes Like

Manasa Rao Saarloos

“I haven’t been to a temple in years, never been forced. My folks always said, marry a nice human being, religion doesn’t matter. They said your god is inside you! Don’t you forget that. Krishna, Jesus, Allah, are all one. Follow vegetarianism as far as you can, but you can choose your own diet, doesn’t matter. Believe in god, but for you and not because the world asks you to. Forgive and forget to be at peace. Do not believe in revenge, believe in karma!!”

― Manasa Rao Saarloos

tags: allah, forgive-and-forget, god, hinduism, jesus, karma, krishna, marriage, parenting, religion-and-philoshophy, spirituality, vegetarianism 2 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“There has been more bloodshed in the name of God than for any other cause. And it is all because people never attempt to reach the fountain-head. They are content only to comply with the customs of their forefathers and instructions on some books, and want others to do the same. But, to explain God after merely reading the scriptures is like explaining the city of New York after seeing it only in a map.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, fundamentalism, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, religious-extremism, religious-faith, religious-terrorism, religious-violence, self-realization, terrorism, transcendentalism 2 likes Like

Vikrmn

“Forgive all before you go to sleep, you'll be forgiven before you get up. – Lord Krishna.”

― Vikrmn, Corpkshetra

tags: 10-golden-steps-of-life, 10gsl, ca-vikram-verma, chartered-accountant, forgive, forgiven, get-up, golden, inspirational, krishna, life, lord-krishna, motivational, sleep, steps, vikram, vikram-verma, vikrmn, vv 2 likes Like

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

“But Krishna was a chameleon.”

― Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Palace of Illusions

tags: identity, krishna, palace-of-illusions 1 likes Like

Padma Viswanathan

“Perhaps terror and peace became the same thing when life's mysteries were unveiled. In the Bhagavad Gita, when Krishna reveals his divine form at Arjuna's request, Arjuna is terrified at seeing what no mortal can stand to see. But the end to human doubt surely must also bring with it a definite, final peace.”

― Padma Viswanathan, The Ever After of Ashwin Rao

tags: arjuna, bhagavad-gita, enlightenment, fear, krishna, life-s-mysteries, mysteries, peace, terror 1 likes Like

Sandeep Sharma

“The moment when your heart’s rhythm synchronises with the chants of the holy temple, you find God in your soul. It was noisy yet peaceful. They were all dancing in the packed hall, with eyes closed and hands swinging up in the air. It was as if the motto of life was nothing but to enjoy this very moment and taste the love of the almighty.”

― Sandeep Sharma, Let The Game Begin

tags: god, krishna, life-and-living, mathura 1 likes Like

Vivian Amis

“All suffering is caused by one belief....the belief in separation”

― Vivian Amis, The Lotus - Realization of Oneness

tags: buddha, business, end-to, family, friends, god, harmony, home, jesus, krishna, love, missery, oneness, partnership, peace, quotes, realization, self, suffering, war, world 1 likes Like

“You don’t need validation or approval from anyone but yourself. Even if the entire world goes against, disagrees with or attempts to crush you, stand up for what you believe in, and stand up alone if you have to! It’s better to die while living your own truth than to live in the truth of another. Lord Krishna in the holy Bhagavad Gita pointed this out when he said;

 

“It is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection.”

 

Integrity is the key to freedom. It’s only your own truth that can ‘set you free.’ It’s perfectly fine if your truth doesn’t match that of others because the experience of physical reality is a completely subjective one. It doesn’t make either of you wrong, as long as you’re both being true to yourselves, that’s all that matters.”

― Craig Krishna, The Labyrinth: Rewiring the Nodes in the Maze of your Mind

tags: beliefs, believe-in, bhagavad-gita, destiny, identity, integrity, key, krishna, opinions, perfection, stand-up, truth 1 likes Like

“Show yourself as an ideal Vaisnava, then you are my representative in full. We are not after titles and designations. We must teach by personal example. Do this and the future of our movement will be glorious.”

― Prabhupada Dasa

tags: krishna 1 likes Like

“When you think you know Everything, you know NOTHING! When you think you know Nothing.. You become KRISHNA- THE UNKNOWN !”

― True Krishna Priya

tags: consciousness, krishna, soul 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you attain the state of Absolute Oneness or Non-Duality, you become one of those spiritual legends that humanity so gloriously venerates as the founding fathers of religion.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

Abhijit Naskar

“Once you emerge from the state of absolute divinity, the self within you becomes Christ – it becomes Buddha – it becomes Moses – it becomes Krishna. The sage who emerges from the state of non-duality begins to perceive the self as Christ, not Christ as Christ – the self as Moses, not Moses as Moses – the self as Mohammed, not Mohammed as Mohammed – the self as Krishna, not Krishna as Krishna.”

― Abhijit Naskar, Love, God & Neurons: Memoir of a scientist who found himself by getting lost

tags: brainy-quotes, buddha, buddhahood, christ, christianity, consciousness-mind-brain, consciousness-quotes, divine-self, harmony-quotes, hinduism, islam, krishna, meditation, mindfulness, mindfulness-quotes, moses, muhammad, muhammad-pbuh, neurotheology, nirvana, nondual-philosophy, nondualism, nonduality, peace, pearls-of-wisdom, philosophy, philosophy-quotes, self-realization, transcendentalism 1 likes Like

“Narada Muni says - Whether you consider the human to be an eternal jivatma or a temporary body, or even if you accept an indescribable opinion that he is both eternal and temporary, you do not have to lament in any way. There is no cause for lamentation other than the affection which has arisen out of delusion. (1.13.44)”

― Srimad Bhagavatam

tags: krishna, spiritual 1 likes Like

“To become free from sinful life, there is only simple method: if you surrender to Kṛṣṇa. That is the beginning of bhakti.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: beginings, bhakti, krishna, krishna-conciousness, method, sin, surrender 0 likes Like

“So it is our request that you try to study Bhagavad-gītā as it is. Don't try to distort it by your so-called education. Try to understand Kṛiṣṇa as He is saying. Then you will be benefited. Your life will be successful.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: benifit-of-doubt, education, krishna, krishna-consciousness, life, life-quotes, study, successful-living, understanding 0 likes Like

Chaitanya Charan Das

“Meditation is defined by not just the mode of thinking, but also the object of thought”

― Chaitanya Charan Das, Gita for Daily Enrichment

tags: chanting, god, krishna, meditation, spirituality, yoga 0 likes Like

“If by studying Bhagavad-gītā one decides to surrender to Kṛṣṇa, he is immediately freed from all sinful reactions.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: freedom, karma, krishna, krishna-consciousness, reactions, sin, study, surrender 0 likes Like

“By studying Bhagavad-gītā, one can become a soul completely surrendered to the Supreme Lord and engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

tags: consciousness, devotion, god, gods-grace, krishna, krishna-conciousness, scriptures, service, study, supreme-love 0 likes Like

Jarett Sabirsh

“being attached to any one philosophy or religion

dwelling on moot differences and wanting to fit in

despite the path all are led Home in time

following an alternative pathway is certainly no crime

Krishna, Buddha, Allah or Zohar Kabbalah

devoted nonviolently, one is led to Nirvana

Hindu Sages, Zen Masters or Christian Mystics

many tongues, but identical truth spoken from their lips

mentioning Self or no-self or God is Father or Mother

according to their culture emphasizing one method or another

allness vs. nothingness, meditation vs. prayer

devotion in practice is all you should care

when Truth reveals itself you're beyond all conception

then not a single man-made word will hold any traction”

― Jarett Sabirsh, Love All-Knowing: An Epic Spiritual Poem

tags: buddha, buddhism, god, krishna, meditation, religion, spirituality 0 likes Like

“The perfection of yoga, therefore, does not terminate in voidness or impersonalism; on the contrary, the perfection of yoga is attained when one actually sees the Personality of Godhead in His eternal form.”

― A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada

"The Mountain Man"

graphite on paper 2.5 x 3.75 in

2006

 

Part of kozy's "Unknown Portraits" series

In the collection of Eric Nakamura.

 

It appears in our new book, The Unknown Portraits.

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

May 12, 2019 - Frank Lloyd Wright's Unity Temple located at 875 Lake Street, Oak Park, Illinois. "Commissioned by the congregation of Oak Park Unity Church in 1905, Wright’s Unity Temple is the greatest public building of the architect’s Chicago years. Wright’s family on his mother’s side were Welsh Unitarians, and his uncle Jenkin Lloyd Jones was a distinguished Unitarian preacher with a parish on Chicago’s south side where Wright and his wife Catherine were married. Wright identified with the rational humanism of Unitarianism, particularly as influenced by Ralph Waldo Emerson’s transcendentalism, uniting all beings as one with the divine presence.

 

Wright’s father had been a Universalist preacher. With their emphasis on a loving God, Universalists were early advocates of abolitionism and were the first church to ordain women. In 1886 Universalist Augusta Chapin became minister of the Oak Park Unity Church, attracting new members to the congregation including Frank Lloyd Wright’s mother Anna. Unitarian Universalist minister Rodney Johonnot succeeded Chapin when she joined the Parliament of World Religions in 1893. A lawyer and graduate of Harvard Divinity School, Johonnot was known for his liberal views, even more extreme than those of Jenkin Lloyd Jones with whom he sometimes took issue.

 

When Unity Church burned to the ground in June 1905, Wright was awarded the commission, and in 1906 Johonnot published a booklet titled, A New Edifice for Unity Church. He wanted a modern building that would embody the principles of “unity, truth, beauty, simplicity, freedom and reason.”

 

Wright was a perfect match to these requirements. The design he submitted to the congregation broke with almost every existing convention for traditional Western ecclesiastic architecture. On the novel choice of construction material Wright states, “There was only one material to choose—as church funds were $45,000. Concrete was cheap.” Wright’s bold concept for the building enabled a series of concrete forms to be repeated multiple times.

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings."

 

In harmony with Wright’s philosophy of organic architecture, the concrete was left uncovered by plaster, brick, or stone. Wright’s sensitive handling of materials was a defining feature of his architecture from early in his career. “Bring out the nature of the materials,” Wright insisted in his seminal essay In the Cause of Architecture, “let their nature intimately into your scheme. Reveal the nature of wood, plaster, brick, or stone in your designs, they are all by nature friendly and beautiful. No treatment can be really a matter of fine art when those natural characteristics are, or their nature is, outraged or neglected.”

 

Unity Temple was a significant commission in Wright’s Oak Park Studio. Charles E. White, who worked as a draftsman for Wright from 1903 to 1906, details the collaborative effort of the Studio to secure the commission, “the chief thing at Wright’s is of course Unity Church, the sketches of which are at last accepted. We have all pleaded and argued with the committee, until we are well nigh worn out. All hands are working on the drawings.”

 

Approached from Lake Street, Unity Temple is a massive and monolithic cube of concrete, sheltered beneath an expansive flat roof. The introspective nature of the building is in part a response to its corner site situated along a busy thoroughfare. No entrance is apparent and the building appears impenetrable, save for a band of high clerestory windows recessed behind decorative piers and shadowed by overhanging eaves.

 

Entry to the building is via a low hall that connects Unity Temple and Unity House. Above the bank of doors leading into the hall, an inscription in bronze declares, “For the worship of God and the service of man.” The low, dimly lit hall that unites the buildings is a transitional space. To the south it opens directly onto Unity House. Designed for “the service of man,” this secular space includes a central meeting hall, flanking balconies for use as open classrooms, and other special purpose rooms for daily operation. Like Wright’s residential architecture, this congregational parish house is centered on a fireplace hearth.

 

Situated across the hall from Unity House is the temple. In contrast to the open entrance into Unity House, access to the sanctuary is complex. Wright masterfully manipulates the sequence of entrance; guiding the visitor through low dark passages he termed “cloisters,” before they ascend into the open, brightly lit sanctuary.

 

The sanctuary is the heart and anchor of the building. At once grand yet intimate, the sanctuary is a masterful composition in light and space. Its elegant articulation and warm colors stand in bold contrast to the grey concrete exterior. Devoid of overt religious iconography, its precise geometric proportions declare a harmonious whole.

The uppermost portion of the sanctuary appears light and transparent. A continuous band of clerestory windows of Wright’s signature leaded glass encircle the flat, coffered ceiling. Set in a concrete grid are twenty-five square skylights of amber tinted leaded glass The effect, Wright states, was intended “to get a sense of a happy cloudless day into the room… daylight sifting through between the intersecting concrete beams, filtering through amber glass ceiling lights. Thus managed, the light would, rain or shine, have the warmth of sunlight.”

 

While Wright’s innovative use of concrete was chosen for its economy, the completed building ultimately cost nearly twice the contracted price due to complications encountered during construction. In September of 1909, the new building was dedicated. Because its unique design bore little resemblance to the other churches along Lake Street, it was decided to rename it Unity Temple.

 

The congregation’s board of trustees issued a statement thanking Wright. “We extend to the architect, Mr. Frank Lloyd Wright, our most hearty congratulations upon the wonderful achievement embodied in the new edifice and further extend to him our most sincere thanks for the great service which, through the building, he has rendered to the parish and to the community. We believe the building will long endure as a monument to his artistic genius and that, so long as it endures, it will stand forth as a masterpiece of art and architecture.” Their words were prophetic."

 

Previous text from the following website: flwright.org/researchexplore/unitytemple

Margaret Fuller, 1810-1850

Thomas Hicks, 1848

Oil on Canvas

Smithsonian

 

Sarah Margaret Fuller Ossoli, commonly known as Margaret Fuller, (May 23, 1810 – July 19, 1850) was an American journalist, critic, and women's rights advocate associated with the American transcendentalism movement. She was the first full-time American female book reviewer in journalism. Her book Woman in the Nineteenth Century is considered the first major feminist work in the United States.

 

Born Sarah Margaret Fuller in Cambridge, Massachusetts, she was given a substantial early education by her father, Timothy Fuller. She later had more formal schooling and became a teacher before, in 1839, she began overseeing what she called "conversations": discussions among women meant to compensate for their lack of access to higher education. She became the first editor of the transcendentalist journal The Dial in 1840, before joining the staff of the New York Tribune under Horace Greeley in 1844. By the time she was in her 30s, Fuller had earned a reputation as the best-read person in New England, male or female, and became the first woman allowed to use the library at Harvard College. Her seminal work, Woman in the Nineteenth Century, was published in 1845. A year later, she was sent to Europe for the Tribune as its first female correspondent. She soon became involved with the revolution in Italy and allied herself with Giuseppe Mazzini. She had a relationship with Giovanni Ossoli, with whom she had a child. All three members of the family died in a shipwreck off Fire Island, New York, as they were traveling to the United States in 1850. Fuller's body was never recovered.

 

Fuller was an advocate of women's rights and, in particular, women's education and the right to employment. She also encouraged many other reforms in society, including prison reform and the emancipation of slaves in the United States. Many other advocates for women's rights and feminism, including Susan B. Anthony, cite Fuller as a source of inspiration. Many of her contemporaries, however, were not supportive, including her former friend Harriet Martineau. She said that Fuller was a talker rather than an activist. Shortly after Fuller's death, her importance faded; the editors who prepared her letters to be published, believing her fame would be short-lived, were not concerned about accuracy and censored or altered much of her work before publication.

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

Day 44 of the 365 days challenge.

 

www.flickr.com/groups/365days

 

I used to be obsessed with quotes; I had a giant binder filled with quotes, witty and obscure and poignant and fascinating, that went almost everywhere with me. As a writer I realize that sounds odd, but there was always a certain strange comfort in knowing someone had said what I wanted to, or already discovered some bit of wisdom I'd been searching for. I've been thinking about those quotes a lot lately.

 

"Love must be as much a light as it is a flame."

 

I hate Thoreau; I hate transcendentalism in general. But he may have been on to something.

 

Love comes in many forms and flavors, longsuffering and enduring. So this is for someone who makes me glow. And who probably isn't aware of it.

under the firmament.

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

Concord. The road into Concord follows the route that the British troops took. At the time of the Revolution Concord was the largest inland town in Massachusetts so it was an important town for the British to secure. The action happened around the North Bridge. But do not be fooled, the current bridge is the 2005 restoration of the 1954 replica of the earlier 1875, 1889 and 1909 replicas! Nevertheless it is a poignant spot. One of the plaques near the bridge states: “They came 3,000 miles and died to keep the past upon the throne.” The bridge spans the Concord River. Five companies of colonial Minute Men and five companies of local militia totalling 400 confronted about 100 trained British troops. The battle here was so significant because the Americans managed to defeat the British and turn them away from the town. There is another statue of the Minute Man at the North Bridge and a large visitor Centre with displays and media presentations of the battle. Nearby and still in the National Historic Park is the Wayside House, dating from 1717. The house had a number of owners including two Concord literary families: Louisa May Alcott of Little Women fame (a Civil War tale); and Nathaniel Hawthorn a major American novelist who was born in Salem and wrote moralistic novels reflecting his puritan heritage. We will also visit The Orchard, the home that Louisa May Alcott lived in when she actually wrote Little Women which is next door to the Wayside. Alcott lived here from 1858 to 1877. This well known book tells the story of life in a middle class New England family whilst the father is away fighting for the Union forces in the Civil War. Alcott was an Abolitionist and she applauded the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention statement on the rights of women.

  

Concord has many literary personalities and so we will also visit the home of Ralph Waldo Emerson called the Old Manse. This typical New England farm house was built in 1770 and still contains the original furnishing and furniture of Emerson. Nathaniel Hawthorn lived in the house after Emerson. Emerson is best described as a moral essayist, and poet who championed the environment – nature - and founded the American philosophical movement known as Transcendentalism. Emerson and his followers believed in the experience and reflection, the unity of nature and God, and that men could discover truths and insights without reference to religion and preaching. Henry David Thoreau was another transcendentalist, and ardent Abolitionist and a well known writer of essays, philosophical books and articles. He also loved nature and was best known for his book on Walden – Life in the Woods. He lived in a woodman’s cabin on the edge of Walden Pond and longed for a simple life which was in harmony with nature and the environment. We will visit Thoreau’s log cabin beside Walden Pond which is pictured above. Fall foliage season is the best time to visit Walden Pond. We have a lunch break to explore and enjoy the centre of Concord with its village green, white wooden houses and churches, antique shops, cafes and red maples.

 

This is a reconstruction of the cabin in a slightly different location near the pond. Henry David Thoreau spent two years living close to nature in the cabin in the 1840's and his resulting book "Walden" is a reflection on simple living in natural srroundings. It is amazing to think that this experience was well before the civil war and before Laura Ingalls Wilder went west in the Little House on the Prairie.

Part 1 // Soundboy in Distress /

In which Our Hero takes it upon himself to chant down Babylon-Mart.

 

Juana Molina - El Vestido

Portishead - Hunter (12th Planet of NFC Remix)

Zomby - The Lie

Manual - Oracle Night

Deadbeat - Rise Again (feat Paul St. Hilaire)

Skream - Dutch Flowerz

The Knife - Forest Families (Stop Time Edit)

Vampire Weekend - The Kids Don't Stand a Chance (Dub Edit)

 

Part 2 // The Animating Force /

See Also: Phillip K Dick, The I Ching, Transcendentalism on the

Dancefloor, R.I.P. ODB.

 

M.I.A. - Paper Planes (DFA Remix)

The Clash - Straight to Hell (Unedited Edit)

The Glimmers - Music for Dreams

Ol Dirty Bastard - Recognize

Donnacha Costello - It Simply Is

Grace Jones - Williams Blood (Aeroplane Rejected Remix)

Akron/Family - How Do I Know?

Friendly Fires - Paris (Aeroplane Remix)

Radiohead - Nude (Ripperton Remix)

Fleet Foxes vs Carl Craig - Winter White Hymal In The Trees (Edit)

 

Part 3 // Spacewalk with Al Green /

Once captured the animal belongs to its captor unless the animal

escapes and returns to its natural liberty.

 

Kayne West - Paranoid (Choppy Edit)

Jose Gonzalez - Killing for Love (Todd Terje Brokemack Mix)

Hercules & Love Affair - Blind (Frankie Knucles Remix)

Ricardo Villalobos vs Mathew Johnson - Enfants Symphony (Edit)

Andy Stott - Handle with Care

Tony Allen - Ole (Moritz van Oswald Remix)

Bvdub - The Road Home

Ricardo Villalobos - Minimoonstar (Shackleton Remix)

Bohren & der Club of Gore - Schwarze Biene (Black Maja)

Al Green - Lay it Down (Spacewalkin' Edit)

 

Part 4 // Epilogue (A Year On Fire) /

 

Ezekiel Honig - Broken Marching Band

Stars of the Lid - Apreludes (In C Sharp Major)

Sufjan Stevens - Riffs and Variations on a Single Note

Valet - We Went There

Akron/Family - Interlude

Burial - Dog Shelter

Tape - Iluminations

Bon Iver vs Deerhunter - Woods Aux Out (edit)

 

"More than anything, The Collapse is a new opportunity to for

groove-based electronic music. This is a creative opportunity that

must be seized. What is to be invented is an extra-technological

context for electronic music, one that is beyond drugged raving and

amphetamine nightlife. But nobody wants to wake up. People just keep

ripping, dropping, downloading and dancing around like it's 1999.

 

Meanwhile it's 2008, and something's on fire."

Lumber Schooners at Evening on Penobscot Bay

 

•Lane, Fitz Henry

•American, 1804-1865

•1863

•Oil on Canvas

•Dimensions:

oOverall: 62.5 × 96.8 cm (24⅝ × 38⅛ in.)

oFramed: 97.8 × 129.5 x 10.2 cm (38½ × 51 × 4 in.)

•Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Hatch, Sr.

•1980.29.1

•On View

 

Overview

 

Despite its meticulous draftsmanship and precise detail, Lane’s work is far more than a simple inventory of harbor activity. The diminutive figures and carefully rendered vessels remain secondary to the vast expanse of sky, where shimmering light creates a tranquil, idyllic mood. Lane’s rarefied landscapes epitomize man’s harmonious union with the natural world.

 

Some scholars have used the term “luminism” to describe the artist’s subtle use of light and atmospheric effects to convey nature’s intangible spirit. Ralph Waldo Emerson, the foremost exponent of American Transcendentalism, believed that poets and painters should serve as conduits through which the experience of nature might be transmitted directly to their audience. With a similarly self-effacing artistic temperament, Lane minimized his autographic presence, using translucent glazes rather than heavily impastoed surfaces to underscore the scene’s pervasive stillness. His elegiac paintings differ profoundly from the more explosive exuberance expressed by Cole and Church, though he shared these artists’ reverence for nature and their belief in its inherent divinity.

 

Inscription

 

•Lower Right: F. H. Lane / 1863

 

Provenance

 

(Harvey Additon, Boston), until c. 1940; Mr. and Mrs. Francis Whiting Hatch, Sr., Boston, and Castine, Maine;[1] gift 1980 to NGA.

 

[1] According to Francis Hatch, Jr. (letter of 9 September 1982 in NGA curatorial files), his father purchased the painting from Harvey Additon’s store on LaGrange Street in Boston about “forty years ago.” Hatch adds: “By coincidence it was the same Additon who found many of the paintings in Maxim Karolik’s collection.”

 

Exhibition History

 

•1963—Maine and Its Artists, 1710-1963, Colby College Art Museum, Waterville, Maine; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 1963-1964, no. 81.

•1966—Fitz Hugh Lane, The First Major Exhibition, De Cordova Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts; Colby College Art Museum, Waterville, Maine, 1966, no. 48.

•1969—American Paintings of Ports and Harbors, 1774-1968, Cummer Gallery of Art, Jacksonville, Florida; Norfold Museum of Arts and Sciences, Virginia, 1969, no. 19.

•1974—Fitz Hugh Lane, 1804-1865, The William A. Farnsworth Library and Art Museum, Rockland, Maine, 1974, no. 43.

•1980—American Light: The Luminist Movement, 1850-1875, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1980, 12, fig. 1, frontispiece.

•1983—A New World: Masterpieces of American Painting 1760-1910, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Grand Palais, Paris, 1983-1984, no. 34, repro.

•1988—Paintings by Fitz Hugh Lane, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1988, no. 61.

•1990—Loan for display with permanent collection, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut, 1990.

•1999—America: The New World in 19th-Century Painting, Österreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna, 1999, no. 36, repro.

•1999—An Enduring Legacy: Masterpieces from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1999-2000, no cat.

•2002—American Sublime: Landscape Painting in the United States 1820-1880, Tate Britain, London; Museum of American Art of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 2002, no. 72, repro. (shown only in London).

 

Technical Summary

 

The support is a tight, plain-weave fabric that has been lined. The original tacking margins have been retained. A thick layer of pale pink priming was applied by the artist. Infrared reflectography reveals little evidence of distinct underdrawing, although the lower and large yard of the foreground ship was originally positioned slightly lower. The paint layer was thinly applied, with virtually no impasted areas other than in the clouds at left. The surface is slightly abraded, most noticeably in the sea and along the top and bottom edges. The varnish has not discolored, however, numerous areas of inpainting scattered throughout have discolored.

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