Paramahansa Yogivah Giri Satsangs

Rama and the Wisdom of Dispassion

1 h 59 min · 15 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Rama and the Wisdom of Dispassion

Descripción

Sri Paramahansa Yogivah Giri uses the story of Rama to correct a common misunderstanding about spiritual life: realization is not about gaining powers, status, or a better worldly life. It is about removing what is false, becoming disinterested in the transient, and learning to see the Self within. The talk also distinguishes true practice from spiritual performance. Guruji stresses that Kriya Yoga is not a sales pitch, not a method for achieving samadhi as an acquisition, and not something to be done for results. It is a disciplined purification under the guidance of a real guru. Through Rama’s melancholy, the nature of impermanence, and examples from daily life, the teaching returns again and again to one point: the world cannot give lasting fulfillment. What matters is steadiness, surrender, and the willingness to let go of tendencies, distractions, and false identifications. Later Q&A covers how to recognize the mind, how to handle problems before meditation, how to understand pratyahara and samadhi, and how to stay firm in practice even when bodily sensations or fear arise. Key insights include: • Rama’s sadness is presented as spiritual dispassion, not ordinary weakness. • Spiritual realization is described as removing impurities, not attaining something new. • Powers, healings, and outward signs are not proof of holiness. • A guru is essential because a book cannot correct a student in real time. • Meditation should not be postponed until worldly problems are solved. • The mind is identified as the inner voice that creates doubt, distraction, and future anxiety. • Kriya Yoga practice is framed as purification and preparation, not a search for results. • Pratyahara is the withdrawal of the senses; after that, meditation can happen naturally. • The speaker repeatedly emphasizes obedience to the guru’s instructions and consistency in daily practice. • Q&A on mind versus self, breath practice, eyebrow focus, and evening meditation disturbances. Timestamps: • 00:00 Intro to Rama and obscure scriptures • 03:20 Gurus and avatars as human beings • 06:10 Spiritual powers and why they mislead • 09:00 True spirituality as removal, not attainment • 12:10 Rama’s melancholy begins • 15:20 Worldly life as impermanent and unsatisfying • 19:10 Kriya Yoga and dispassion • 23:00 Why the guru is necessary • 28:10 Trust in God versus worry • 31:20 Question on longing for God • 36:10 Tendencies and daily discipline • 41:30 Meditation is not for results • 47:20 Question on mind versus self • 55:00 Pratyahara and the start of meditation • 01:11:20 Evening meditation and bodily jerks

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29 episodios

Portada del episodio Rama and the Wisdom of Dispassion

Rama and the Wisdom of Dispassion

Sri Paramahansa Yogivah Giri uses the story of Rama to correct a common misunderstanding about spiritual life: realization is not about gaining powers, status, or a better worldly life. It is about removing what is false, becoming disinterested in the transient, and learning to see the Self within. The talk also distinguishes true practice from spiritual performance. Guruji stresses that Kriya Yoga is not a sales pitch, not a method for achieving samadhi as an acquisition, and not something to be done for results. It is a disciplined purification under the guidance of a real guru. Through Rama’s melancholy, the nature of impermanence, and examples from daily life, the teaching returns again and again to one point: the world cannot give lasting fulfillment. What matters is steadiness, surrender, and the willingness to let go of tendencies, distractions, and false identifications. Later Q&A covers how to recognize the mind, how to handle problems before meditation, how to understand pratyahara and samadhi, and how to stay firm in practice even when bodily sensations or fear arise. Key insights include: • Rama’s sadness is presented as spiritual dispassion, not ordinary weakness. • Spiritual realization is described as removing impurities, not attaining something new. • Powers, healings, and outward signs are not proof of holiness. • A guru is essential because a book cannot correct a student in real time. • Meditation should not be postponed until worldly problems are solved. • The mind is identified as the inner voice that creates doubt, distraction, and future anxiety. • Kriya Yoga practice is framed as purification and preparation, not a search for results. • Pratyahara is the withdrawal of the senses; after that, meditation can happen naturally. • The speaker repeatedly emphasizes obedience to the guru’s instructions and consistency in daily practice. • Q&A on mind versus self, breath practice, eyebrow focus, and evening meditation disturbances. Timestamps: • 00:00 Intro to Rama and obscure scriptures • 03:20 Gurus and avatars as human beings • 06:10 Spiritual powers and why they mislead • 09:00 True spirituality as removal, not attainment • 12:10 Rama’s melancholy begins • 15:20 Worldly life as impermanent and unsatisfying • 19:10 Kriya Yoga and dispassion • 23:00 Why the guru is necessary • 28:10 Trust in God versus worry • 31:20 Question on longing for God • 36:10 Tendencies and daily discipline • 41:30 Meditation is not for results • 47:20 Question on mind versus self • 55:00 Pratyahara and the start of meditation • 01:11:20 Evening meditation and bodily jerks

15 de jun de 20261 h 59 min
Portada del episodio When the False Self Falls Away

When the False Self Falls Away

Paramahansa Yogivah Giri explains why self-realization is not a long spiritual project, but a direct recognition of what you already are. He contrasts outer religion, book study, and bodily identification with the clarity that comes through true knowledge and meditation. He returns again and again to Shankaracharya for his sharpness and practical language, especially on ignorance, the prison of samsara, and the release that comes when the mind stops mistaking passing thoughts and habits for the Self. He also stresses that bhakti, love of God, is the easiest path and that Kriya Yoga supports it when practiced correctly. The talk also includes strong warnings about misunderstanding spiritual practice: the techniques are not magic by themselves, and they are not meant to be used as a status display or a substitute for real inwardness. He emphasizes pratyahara, the withdrawal of the senses, as the essential doorway into meditation and says that clarity comes when the stench of worldliness is removed. He illustrates the teaching with stories from his own life: his parents, his practice in solitude, his initiation experience, and the way true guidance can transform one’s perception immediately. For serious practitioners who want direct instruction rather than spiritual fantasy. Key insights include: - Self-realization is immediate in principle, not a future reward after many lives. - Knowledge is not in books; understanding depends on perception and inner clarity. - Bhakti is presented as the easiest path, especially when joined with Kriya Yoga sadhana. - Pratyahara, the withdrawal of the senses, is the key step before true meditation. - The mind’s habits are not the Self, even when they still continue to appear. - Shankaracharya is praised for his clarity, especially on ignorance, samsara, and liberation. - A true guru shows the way clearly and can expose hidden tendencies through direct correction. - Outer appearances, labels, and spiritual status claims are unreliable without real realization.   Timestamps: - 00:00:00 — Teeth, body, and a humorous opening. - 00:02:10 — Why Shankaracharya stands out. - 00:05:20 — The body, consciousness, and ignorance. - 00:09:40 — Knowledge, books, and misunderstanding. - 00:14:10 — The role of a guru. - 00:18:30 — The spiritual world and turning toward light. - 00:23:00 — “You are pure right now.” - 00:28:20 — The experience of karma being removed. - 00:34:10 — Shankaracharya on strong desires and bondage. - 00:39:30 — Fragrance, stench, and purification. - 00:44:00 — Bhakti as the easiest path. - 00:49:20 — Kriya Yoga and keeping practice private. - 00:55:10 — Superconsciousness and what others notice. - 01:02:00 — Realization, false claims, and true guidance. - 01:10:30 — Question on parents and spiritual practice.

7 de jun de 20261 h 59 min
Portada del episodio Pratyahara Is the Real Turning Point

Pratyahara Is the Real Turning Point

This satsang draws a firm line between outer life and inner realization. Paramahansa Yogivah Giri begins with everyday examples—village labor, family outings, business pressure, and ordinary frustrations—to show that no worldly setting is free from difficulty. His larger point is simple: uncertainty, discomfort, and worry are built into life, so peace cannot be found by changing circumstances alone. He then turns to spirituality and challenges the habit of relying on secondhand teaching. Books, lectures, and philosophical opinions may contain information, but they are not the same as divine consciousness. What matters is direct knowledge from one who has actually realized the truth and can give authentic guidance. The talk gives special attention to meditation and pratyahara. He rejects the idea that meditation is mainly about forcing the mind to become quiet. Instead, he teaches that the seeker should turn toward God, attend to the breath, and move inward through pratyahara into true meditation. The mind is treated as commentary, while consciousness is presented as the real faculty of perception. A major theme is the role of memories, impressions, and karma. He explains that these shape perception in life and even in near-death experiences, which is why purification matters. Kriya Yoga is presented as the practical method for dissolving impressions, refining awareness, and moving toward the divine presence within. Key insights include: •Suffering and uncertainty follow us in every stage of life. •True spiritual knowledge comes from direct divine realization. •Meditation is not mind suppression, but God-conscious attention. •Pratyahara is the crucial withdrawal of the senses inward. •Breath awareness supports inner concentration. •Memories and impressions shape perception and must be purified. •Kriya Yoga is the practical method for inner transformation. •A true guru teaches from realization, not from theory. Timestamps: - 00:00 Village life and worldly worries - 09:40 No escape from pressure in life - 16:20 Why many spiritual sources are unreliable - 22:10 Divine consciousness as the true source - 28:30 Consciousness, robots, and near-death experiences - 35:50 Memories and impressions shaping perception - 43:20 Meditation is not quieting the mind - 49:10 Breath, desire, and inner turning - 56:40 False ideas about meditation - 01:03:10 Why true gurus teach plainly - 01:10:30 Om, prana, and the inner path - 01:18:20 Pratyahara explained in scripture - 01:26:00 Life, age, and the limits of sense enjoyment - 01:33:10 How pratyahara works in daily activity - 01:41:00 Bhakti, renunciation, and purification

31 de may de 20261 h 59 min
Portada del episodio The World Is Not Your Goal — Realize the Self Now

The World Is Not Your Goal — Realize the Self Now

Paramahansa Yogivah Giri insists that Self‑realization is an ancient, timeless truth and that the surviving scriptures carry tested wisdom rather than modern, impure ideas. He argues that spirituality was never meant to fix worldly life or give comforting promises; it shows you that true happiness already exists within and does not depend on changing external circumstances. He warns against spiritual teachers who sell hope, popularity, or worldly improvement, and stresses that a true satguru never promises to give realization—only a disciplined sadhana and clear instruction can reveal the Self. Practical obstacles to meditation (scattered kriya practice, talkativeness, bringing the world into practice) are exposed and corrected in plain terms. Becoming genuinely selfless—thinking of others first—is presented as the necessary inner preparation for real meditation. Key insights include: - Self‑realization is ancient and not a new technique; read the oldest scriptures for tested truth.   - Spirituality doesn’t guarantee a perfected worldly life; avatars still faced suffering.   - Hope and sales‑style promises are signs of false prophets; a true guru won’t promise results.   - Samadhi is a state of concentrated mind, not the same as final realization.   - Many so‑called meditation methods mix kriyas and never teach true meditation.   - Meditation requires calmness and prior selflessness, not thought about outcomes.   - Practical selflessness: think of others first (simple daily tests like thermostat stories).   - Renunciation is ultimately an inner seeing—recognizing the world as superimposition, not forcing external abandonment.   - The right technique (e.g., Hong‑sau) must be practiced with clear purpose and concentrated effort.   - True instruction is rare; recognize the minority path and take responsibility for sincere practice. Timestamps: 00:07 Introduction — importance of ancient scriptures   02:30 Why modern spiritual books carry impurities   05:10 Scripture: happiness is within, not a change in the world   09:00 Why avatars’ lives don’t prove worldly perfection   12:45 False prophets and the promise of better worldly life   16:30 Samadhi versus realization; what samadhi is   20:15 Problems with mixed kriya-heavy practice   24:40 How sorrow creates spiritual urgency   29:10 Practical selflessness example (thermostat story)   33:50 Renunciation: throw away what’s unreal, not the Self   38:20 Hongsa (Hong‑sau) technique: purpose and pitfalls   43:05 Meditation needs calmness before sitting   48:37 Q&A — how to create daily urgency for practice

25 de may de 20261 h 58 min
Portada del episodio Kriya Yoga Is for Practice, Not Talk

Kriya Yoga Is for Practice, Not Talk

In this divine Satsang, Paramahansa Yogivah Giri draws a clear line between talking about Kriya Yoga and actually living it. Through vivid examples like riding a bicycle, going to the gym, and buying a house, he shows that spiritual truth is known by direct experience, not by endless analysis. He explains that group gatherings can encourage practice, but they can also distract from the inward journey. The real purpose of Kriya Yoga is to go within, place the attention correctly, and continue with steady, serious daily practice. Paramahansa Yogivah Giri also stresses the role of a living guru, who can guide the disciple beyond theory and external opinions. He warns against getting trapped in biographies, controversies, and surface-level concerns, because none of that touches the essence of realization. Key insights include: * Kriya Yoga must be practiced, not merely discussed. * Group meditation can motivate, but it is not the same as true inward absorption. * Daily practice after initiation is essential. * A living guru is needed for higher guidance. * External controversies and stories are secondary. * The goal is direct experience of the Self. Timestamps: * 00:02 — The bicycle analogy: riding versus analyzing. * 02:10 — Group meditation and its limitations. * 04:05 — Going within and placing attention. * 06:20 — Why a living guru matters. * 08:15 — Perspective, bias, and different traditions. * 10:30 — Direct experience versus study. * 12:40 — Why external concerns do not matter. * 14:55 — Practice immediately after initiation. * 16:30 — Escaping samsara through inward realization.

17 de may de 20261 h 59 min