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Copy-pastes that don't fit well into any of the other categories.

Are We Internet Freaks? -



betal_nut - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 06:25:10 +0530
Windows To The Material World

[ Writings and realizations of His Holiness Dhanurdhara Swami ]

Vasant Falls, New York


I just finished assembling my journals into book form for a final edit. The book will be called Greetings from Vrindavan. I'm looking forward to writing new journal entries after a long intermission.

Fortunately, I finished the work before my computer crashed. I knew it was on the blink, but I dreaded the day when it needed to be sent for repair. Leaving the shop on my way home, however, I felt a surprising relief, a sense of liberation. Even though I use the computer almost exclusively for my writing and correspondence, it felt as if some shackle of illusion had been lifted.

I vaguely remember a popular book from my college days called The Medium is the Message by Marshal McLuhan. His point was that the medium in which one receives information has a greater influence than the message it conveys. I recall him describing television as a cold medium because one generally learns passively from it. In contrast, he described the press as a hot medium because we have to activate our intellect in order to assimilate what we've read. McLuhan concluded that cold mediums. like television, make one lazy and dull the intelligence, while hot mediums have the opposite effect, regardless of the content one receives from either.

I am convinced that, like television, the medium of the computer also has insidious effects because it subtly injects one with the need for incessant distraction-an especially menacing prospect for those on a spiritual path where the mind needs to be calmed to touch one's essence.

I lived in Vrndavana for 20 years without even a phone. I didn't die of boredom; instead, I remained absorbed in scripture, nama, and seva. To be peaceful now, I require the world at my doorstep with the click of a button, even while living in Vrndavana. Something is wrong.

According to the Svetasvatara Upanisad, God sits within our heart to observe and advise us in the form of the paramatma, the Supersoul. It describes this by the analogy of two birds in a tree: one bird is eating the fruits of happiness and distress, while the other is watching, waiting for his friend to turn to him. The observant bird is compared to the Supersoul and the engrossed bird is compared to the individual living entity. The idea is that as long as we are externally absorbed in the chatter of the mind, we cannot hear the voice of God in the heart directing us.

Riding home, unshackled from my computer, it suddenly hit me how the medium of mass communication so strongly allures us to the platform of the mind, and how the effect is so pervasive that we usually mistake our bondage for normal life. I felt cheated of my innocence, a life unfettered by the unremitting dialogue of the mind that affords one the quietude to turn toward the Lord in the heart. Sadly we have been drawn in droves to the life of the engrossed bird. Perhaps it is more like lemmings to the sea.

Just to the right of the foot of Srila Prabhupada's bed in Vrndavana hangs two beautiful paintings: one of Krishna and the cowherd boys returning home from the forest of Vrndavana, the other of Radha and Krishna by the bank of the Yamuna under a kadamba tree. Srila Prabhupada called such paintings of Krishna "windows to the spiritual world." In my early Vrndavana days, I would gaze at these masterpieces during japa and think of Srila Prabhupada's "windows" analogy. It made so much sense. Today I thought of another "windows" analogy, and unfortunately, it made just as much sense: Computers are the windows to the material world.
arekaydee - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 08:13:05 +0530
Originally found here - http://www.wavesofdevotion.com/journal/archives/000285.html
Madhava - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 12:40:40 +0530
Thanks for the reference. Please always accredit the author, Betal ji.
Madhava - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 14:00:45 +0530
The idea of "cold" and "hot" medium doesn't really fit in here, since PCs, unlike TV, are an interactive medium.

As for the "world on your doorstep" and "distractions" vs. solitude and isolation, I cannot escape from thinking of Bhaktivinoda's terms gosthyanandi and viviktanandi. Do we find our joy in [inter[/i]action or solitude?

Granted, the internet can be a convenient way of extensively wasting one's time, but then again one who desires to waste his time will find the means with or without a computer.
betal_nut - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 23:09:08 +0530
QUOTE
Thanks for the reference. Please always accredit the author, Betal ji.


I did. Someone came in and edited my post. mad.gif
Madhava - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 23:18:03 +0530
I added the "[ Writings and realizations of His Holiness Dhanurdhara Swami ]" there. Was there something removed prior to that?
Jagat - Fri, 09 Jul 2004 23:36:14 +0530
I edited the post, just to format it a little. I did not notice any reference, but it is quite possible that I accidentally erased something. My apologies.