SM Karyakar Energiser
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As karyakars, we should always be ready to participate in any seva opportunities that arise. Let us read on how our beloved Guru Mahant Swami Maharaj has this inclination and resolve to bring this enthusiasm for seva into our lives…
During our seva activities, we should never feel we are too important to carry out what may seem to be for us as menial seva? Let us read this seva prasang from the life of our beloved Guru Mahant Swami Maharaj and ensure that this feeling never arises in us…
On the auspicious day of Pramukh Varni Din, let us watch this video of Param Pujya Pramukh Swami Maharaj narrating about that day in 1950 whilst also humbly appreciating all the seva of others. Let us ensure we also serve as dilligently as Swamishri did whilst always appreciating the efforts of other karyakars in our respective mandals...
“That way there is no tension…no load is felt at all…we remain happy 24 hours a day…there is no burden, only bliss...”
How can we experience the feelings above despite having the responsibility of our seva activities? Let us read on the words of our beloved Guru Pramukh Swami Maharaj on this secret…
As kāryakars, two things can quietly derail our sevā — pride when things go well, and the weight of feeling it all rests on our shoulders when they don't. This excerpt from Divinity by Anandswarupdas Swami cuts to the heart of both. In a brief exchange with a well known Jain philanthropist, Pramukh Swami Maharaj reminds us of a truth that our Guru’s have always lived by — that it is God's strength, not ours, that carries the work forward. Once this is truly understood, both pride and burden simply fall away.
We are pleased to share Part Two of I Want to Make Everyone a Dhāni — Param Pujya Mahant Swami Maharaj’s āshirvād on the spirit with which we should approach our sevā.
In this part, Swamishri turns to what truly sets the dhāni apart: when an obstacle arises mid-sevā, rather than stepping back, the dhāni steps forward — asking why the work has stopped and pressing on regardless. A quiet but powerful benchmark for each of us to measure ourselves against.
Let us take some time to read, reflect, and immerse ourselves in this vichār.
Part One Intro: We are pleased to share Part One of I Want to Make Everyone a Dhani — Param Pujya Mahant Swami Maharaj’s āshirvād on the spirit with which we should approach our sevā.
Drawing on the heartfelt wish of Pramukh Swami Maharaj, Swamishri places a simple but searching question before each of us: are we a dhāni — absorbed in the work until it is truly complete — or a majur, merely counting the hours?
Let us take some time to read, reflect, and immerse ourselves in this vichār.
On this auspicious day of Vaishak Vad Bāras, the Prāgatya Din of Brahmswarup Yogiji Maharaj, we are blessed to release the full eBook of Prāpti no Vichār — Mahant Swami Maharaj’s kathā series on understanding and imbibing the extraordinary prāpti we have attained.
Also included are Param Pujya Pramukh Swami Maharaj’s own words on this topic from 2010 — a kathā he delivered for 20 continuous minutes, concluding with: “If this can be done, then my coming here will be worthwhile – ‘sārthak thashe’.”
We pray to Maharaj and Swami that we may take this path of prāpti no vichār as kāryakars of Maharaj and Swami, and allow its mahimā to transform our sevā from within.
https://sway.cloud.microsoft/u4QocYBHZkxcnZYg?ref=Link
We are pleased to share the final part of this series on prāpti no vichār.
In this part, Swamishri draws on the image of the sanctum sanctorum in Sārangpur Mandir — where Maharaj's swarup stands at the very centre — to illustrate what it means to keep Bhagwān as the centrepoint of our lives. He reminds us that without contemplating on our prāpti, the mind drifts, and the first thing to creep in is abhāv avgun. But when this prāpti is truly understood, mān and irshā simply cease to register — like ants passing by during a kathā, unworthy of note.
For us as kāryakars, Swamishri's closing words carry a quiet urgency: the prāpti is already ours — we simply need to immerse ourselves in it. Let us take some time to read, reflect, and immerse ourselves in this vichār.
https://sway.cloud.microsoft/tmT6MDF1EjBeVkAO?ref=Link
We are pleased to share Part 6 of this series on prāpti no vichār. In this part, Swamishri explains that the mind naturally moves toward three things — that which it sees mahimā in, that which it loves, and that which it feels is a necessity. Through vivid, everyday examples, he shows that contemplating on our prāpti is what builds all three, drawing the mind naturally toward Bhagwān.
He then turns to a searching question for each of us: after years of mālā, pujā, sevā and kathā, are we pausing to ask whether anything has actually changed within? For us as kāryakars, this is an invitation to measure our Satsang not by years spent, but by whether our vāsanās have lessened and our swabhāvs have softened.
Let us take some time to read, reflect, and immerse ourselves in this vichār.
https://sway.cloud.microsoft/AMS6QkdVPydINkHQ?ref=Link
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